The 2010s were dominated by teen dramas as the genre proliferated on The CW. However, one of the biggest shows of the decade was MTV’s supernatural teen series, Teen Wolf. Starring Tyler Posey and Dylan O’Brien, the series made its cast members overnight stars and ran for six seasons, concluding in 2017. Like many popular shows, the series staged a 2023 reunion for a follow-up movie aptly titled Teen Wolf: The Movie. Despite poor critical reception, Teen Wolf: The Movie performed decently for Paramount+, becoming the top original movie upon its release. The film has largely been forgotten, but three years later, it has seen renewed interest.

Streaming data from FlixPatrol shows that Teen Wolf: The Movie was among the most-watched movies on Tubi over the past week. It peaked at number six on the free streaming service before disappearing, signaling decent but fickle engagement. Teen Wolf: The Movie received negative reviews from critics and mixed reviews from fans. It was criticized for its length, coming in at over two hours despite lacking a good story. However, fans of the original series appreciated the nostalgia hit after seeing their favorite pack together — at least part of it.

“Overall, Teen Wolf: The Movie packs a heavy punch and stands tall in the original series’ six-season shadow. The film pulls on threads that have always resonated well with its loyal viewer base and continues the story of these treasured characters forward in a truly authentic way,” Safeeyah Kazi wrote in her review of Teen Wolf: The Movie for Collider. “Whilst some omissions are hard to get past, the film does well to embrace them and offers a collective conclusion to most storylines in a way that honors the fan devotion behind the series,” she added. The movie might not have satisfied fans because there is still demand for more.

The scores below reveal your true character. Your highest number is your match. Even a tie tells a story — the Fellowship was never made of simple people.

You carry something heavy — and you carry it alone, even when you don’t have to. You were not born for greatness, and that is precisely why greatness chose you. Your courage is not the roaring, sword-swinging kind; it is quiet, stubborn, and terrifying in its refusal to quit. The Ring weighs on you more than anyone can see, and still you walk toward the fire. That is not weakness. That is the rarest kind of strength there is.

You are, without question, the best of them. Not the most powerful, not the most celebrated — but the most essential. Your loyalty is not a trait; it is a force of nature. You would carry the person you love up the slopes of Mount Doom if it came to that, and we both know you’d do it without being asked. The world needs more people like you, and the world is lucky it has even one.

You were born to lead, and you have spent years running from it. The crown is yours by right, but you know better than anyone that right means nothing without the will and the worthiness to back it up. You are tempered by loss, shaped by long roads, and defined by a code of honour you hold to even when no one is watching. When you finally step forward, the world shifts. Because it was always waiting for you.

You have seen more than you let on, and you say less than you know — which is exactly as it should be. You are a catalyst: you do not fight the battles yourself, you ignite the people who can. Your wisdom comes not from books but from an age of watching what happens when it is ignored. You arrive precisely when you mean to, and your presence alone changes what is possible. A wizard is never late.

Graceful, perceptive, and almost preternaturally calm under pressure — you see things others miss and act before others react. You do not need to make a scene to be remarkable; your presence speaks for itself. You are loyal to those you choose to stand beside, and that choice is not made lightly. You have lived long enough to know that the most beautiful things in this world are also the most fragile, and that is why you fight to protect them.

You are loud, proud, and absolutely formidable — and beneath all of that is one of the most fiercely loyal hearts in Middle-earth. You don’t do anything by half measures. Your friendships are forged like iron, your grudges run as deep as mines, and your courage in battle is the kind that makes legends. You came into this fellowship suspicious of everyone and ended it willing to die for an elf. That is not a small thing. That is everything.

You think in centuries and act in absolutes. Order, dominion, control — not because you are cruel by nature, but because you have decided that the world left to itself always falls apart, and you are the only one with the vision and the will to hold it together. You were not always this. Something was lost, or taken, or betrayed, and the version of you that stands now is the answer to that wound. The tragedy is that you’re not entirely wrong — just entirely too far gone to course-correct.

You are a study in contradiction — pitiable and dangerous, cunning and broken, capable of both cruelty and something that once resembled love. You are defined by loss: of innocence, of self, of the one thing that gave your existence meaning. Two voices war inside you constantly, and the tragedy is that the better one sometimes wins, just not often enough, and never at the right moment. You are a warning, yes — but also a mirror. We are all a little Gollum, given the right ring and enough time.

Posey revealed in an interview that the story was never meant to end after the first movie. “Originally, it was a three-picture deal, and then it sort of abandoned ship after the first movie. But everybody wants more,” he said. “So I wrote the second film. I’m trying to get that one made, and then I have an idea for the third,” Posey added. “Or we’re just going to do a TV series, but there will be more, and I’m going to spearhead it. I want it really bad.” One of the biggest flaws of the first movie was the absence of fan favorites like O’Brien and Arden Cho, but Posey said they “definitely have some people on board” for the next films — if they are made.

Stream Teen Wolf: The Movie on Tubi in the U.S., and stay tuned to Collider for more updates.

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Russell Mulcahy, Jeff Davis

Jeff Davis