Wolf Lake
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Wolf Lake was a short-lived American television series that aired on CBS. Wolf Lake follows a pack of werewolves living in a Seattle suburb. Nine episodes and a non-aired pilot were made before the show was cancelled. ITV bought the rights to show the series in the United Kingdom and the SCI FI Channel bought the rights to show the series in the United States.[1] Ran Galor's song "Quiet the Night" was the theme song.
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[edit] Summary
Seattle policeman John Kanin proposes to his girlfriend, Ruby Wilder, and she accepts. However, as she gets into her car, she is attacked and all Kanin finds is a severed hand. He travels to her hometown of Wolf Lake to find some answers. However, his experiences there raise even more questions. What John doesn't know is that some of the inhabitants of Wolf Lake are actually werewolves.
The first episode of Wolf Lake was aired by SCI FI on Friday, July 13, 2007, and the remaining episodes were aired on SCI FI on Thursday, October 18, 2007.
[edit] Episodes
- Meat The Parents
- The Changing
- Soup to Nuts
- Tastes Like Chicken
- Excitable Boy
- Four Feet Under
- Leader of the Pack
- Legend of Lost Lenore
- If These Wolves Could Talk
[edit] Cast
- Lou Diamond Phillips - John Kanin
- Tim Matheson - Sheriff Matthew Donner
- Graham Greene - Sherman Blackstone
- Sharon Lawrence - Vivian Cates
- Scott Bairstow - Tyler Creed
- Mia Kirshner - Ruby Wilder/Cates
- Bruce McGill - Willard Cates
- Paul Wasilewski - Luke Cates
- Mary Elizabeth Winstead - Sophia Donner
- Kellie Waymire - Miranda Devereaux
[edit] Guest Stars
- Bill Mondy
- Gregory Itzin
- Sam Anderson
- Carmen Moore
- Fiona Scott
- Levi James
- Christian Bocher
- Craig Olejnik
- Sarah Carter
[edit] Trivia
- The series was nominated for an Emmy Award for its main title design.
- Bruce McGill, Bill Mondy, Gregory Itzin, Sharon Lawrence, Sam Anderson and Kellie Waymire guest starred in several of the Star Trek spin-offs.
- Tim Matheson and Bruce McGill starred together in National Lampoon's Animal House, and later in the Chris Farley/David Spade comedy Black Sheep in 1996.
[edit] References
- ^ Sci Fi (2006-08-02). SCI FI CHANNEL CLOSES MAJOR DEAL WITH CBS PARAMOUNT TO ACQUIRE RIGHTS FOR TELEFILMS AND SERIES INCLUDING 'STAR TREK: ENTERPRISE'. Press release. http://www.thefutoncritic.com/news.aspx?id=20060802scifi01. Retrieved on 2007-10-15.

