For this month’s Full Moon Feature, I’m heading to Brazil for the 2015 horror anthology As Fábulas Negras, which translates to Dark Fables or The Black Fables (the title it appears under on Tubi). The work of four directors who tackled different facets of Brazilian folklore, its most high-profile participant is José Mojica Marins, creator of the macabre character Coffin Joe, but not the director of the lone werewolf segment. That was Petter Baiestorf, but since his story comes second, we’ll circle back to it.
The overall premise is that four kids in costumes are playing in the woods, pelting each other with water balloons, until they decide to call it a day. There’s plenty of time on their trek back home to trade scary stories, though, some of which the tellers insist are based on true events. That’s the case with opener “Monster of the Sewer,” which doubles as a critique of buck-passing civil servants, none of which are willing to take responsibility for cleaning up a sewage spill that only appears to be affecting one house in an entire neighborhood. Needless to say, this one is highly scatological, but it features the film’s first monster, which looks reasonably impressive.

The same goes for the werewolf in “Pampa Feroz,” although the story it appears in is less than riveting. When one of the underlings of a character known only as The Colonel is found mutilated, the speculation is that it must be the work of a werewolf because “no human could have done this,” a claim the non-superstitious Colonel dismisses. “Whatever it is, we’re going to solve it with bullets.” When suspicion falls on a local voodoo priest, one of his men dons a ridiculous homemade suit of armor to confront the old man and winds up killing him. That doesn’t stop the werewolf attacks, though. In fact, one of the Colonel’s other men is killed that very night, which leads to reprisals and a very messy reveal of who the werewolf is. (If you guess who it is the first time the character appears, you will probably be right.)
Next up is “The Saci,” which was the nearly 80-year-old Marins’s follow-up to 2008’s Embodiment of Evil, his revival of the long-dormant Coffin Joe. Its focus is on a girl whose parents don’t believe her when she has an encounter in a bamboo grove with a Saci, which is played by a puppet. The scene where it sneaks up on a hunter is one for the ages, as is the exorcism performed by a priest played by none other than Marins. As for the last two segments, “Bloody Blonde” and “Iara’s House,” there’s not much that can be said for them, although the latter does feature a cameo by Satan, who’s played by the same actor who was the sewer monster and the werewolf. Versatile guy.
