The production of MTV's Teen Wolf pilot episode in 2011 encountered severe challenges from freezing temperatures, equipment failures, and a flash flood. These obstacles forced the crew to improvise in unusual locations while working on a tight budget. Despite the difficulties, the series went on to success over six seasons.
MTV's supernatural drama Teen Wolf, which premiered in 2011 and drew inspiration from the 1985 Michael J. Fox film of the same name as well as 1980s classics like The Lost Boys and Stand by Me, faced significant hurdles during its pilot shoot. The series creator, Jeff Davis, described the first day of filming on the Beacon Hills lacrosse field as particularly grueling due to bitterly cold weather.
"It was absolutely freezing that day," Davis told Entertainment Weekly in 2021. "I think it was 25 degrees. We were so unbearably cold, and we started late because one of the cameras broke on the first day and we had to get one sent to us really quickly. We were behind right from the beginning. We barely got any footage that day and it was terrifying."
The conditions worsened for the meet-cute scene between Tyler Posey's Scott McCall and Crystal Reed's Allison Argent, filmed at dawn in inappropriate summer attire and under a rain machine. Posey later called it the coldest day of his career.
Further complications arose during the opening scene, where Scott encounters a werewolf while searching for a dead body in the woods. A flash flood destroyed equipment, prompting director Russell Mulcahy to relocate production. "We finished the scene inside the catering tent," Mulcahy recounted. "Jeff and I moved the tables, we dug the hole, and we filmed the image of the dead body with people eating their salads watching us do it."
Budget constraints added to the creativity needed for the werewolf attack sequence, with parts shot in a producer's garage decorated with foliage from a nearby park. Davis noted, "If you look back at the opening werewolf-attack scene, parts of that scene were shot in a producer's garage."
Despite these trials, Davis credited the chaos for the show's eventual triumph. "When a pilot goes really well, you're doomed," he said. "When it's one disaster after another, you know you're going to series." The series ran for six seasons and inspired a 2023 Paramount+ film, Teen Wolf: The Movie.