The body horror-fueled creature feature struggles to thread the needle of its family-under-siege premise with a cohesive ...
Director Leigh Whannell brings the werewolf back to the big screen in a surprisingly simple and softly scary way ...
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 ...
Unfortunately for Blake, he spots a familiar tattoo on the werewolf's arm, revealing that the werewolf was his father. This tragic reveal is a callback and a reversal of the ending of The Wolf Man.
Leigh Whannell's new horror movie Wolf Man offers an update to traditional, well-established Hollywood werewolf mythology.
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.
Common Sense Media also reviews “One of Them Days” and “Autumn and the Black Jaguar.” ...
"Wolf Man" has moments of suspense and psychological tension but leans too heavily on jump scares and a weak story, says film ...
The director of 'The Invisible Man' creates another effective modern take on one of the iconic Universal Monsters ...
Wolf Man”—a reboot of Universal Studios’ classic movie monster—is new in theaters this weekend. Find out where you can stream ...
Leigh Whannell’s Wolf Man boasts some impressive filmmaking and fresh spins on werewolf lore, but its story lacks bite.
“Wolf Man” then jumps ahead 30 years, to adult Blake (Christopher Abbott) out in a busy San Francisco enjoying daddy-daughter ...