Leigh Whannell’s Wolf Man reimagines the 1941 classic with a visceral, modern edge that blends raw emotional stakes with atmospheric dread. Anchored by stella ...
Of all the classic Universal monsters, the Wolf Man stands as perhaps the purest cinematic creation. Sure, the Mummy was also ostensibly created for the silver screen, but its reign as a monster pales ...
Even the most famous cinematic werewolf, the titular Wolf Man introduced by Universal Pictures in 1941, has struggled to stand out. Watching these movies back-to-back forces you to confront a reality ...
Wolf Man director Leigh Whannell discusses why classic creatures like the werewolf, Nosferatu, and Frankenstein’s monster still matter, and what Hollywood can do to get them right.
The themes within “Wolf Man” are far blunter than “Invisible Man,” but it will be interesting to see if Whannell continues to ...
"Wolf Man" writer-director Leigh Whannell told UPI he wanted his modern re-imagining of the classic Universal Pictures ...
Leigh Whannell talks to us about modernising Wolf Man for today's audiences, the success of his previous film The Invisible ...
Leigh Whannell’s Wolf Man boasts some impressive filmmaking and fresh spins on werewolf lore, but its story lacks bite.
To be feral is, in a sense, to be free. But not in the new edition of an oft-told story, “Wolf Man,” co-written and directed ...
There’s a lot of bouncing back and forth between the farmhouse and the barn and the obligatory Rickety Old Pickup Truck with a Dead Battery; at times it’s reminiscent of that insurance commercial with ...
Leigh Whannell follows ‘The Invisible Man’ with another update on a classic from the Universal archives, unfolding in an ...
Feyre completes all the trials (including stabbing Tamlin, which is fair seeing that he literally sent her away after having ...