Leigh Whannell’s Wolf Man manages to strip the genre of its last shreds of dignity, replacing suspense with an onslaught of gore and nonsense.
Julia Garner won three Emmys for her work in “Ozark.” Now, in “Wolf Man,” she plays a woman in peril. What happened?
Wolf Man is supposed to be a wolfman/werewolf movie, but it’s more of a solemn-dad-loses-his-hair-and-a-couple-of-teeth-while ...
These days, it may seem like wolves are spending an awful lot of time in the news in Colorado, but the truth is wolves have ...
In a video shared by Jae Wolf, the woman reveals how she was sitting at a movie theatre with her kids when she made a shocking discovery: her boyfriend of two years had a secret family. Wolf said in ...
Although he was initially reluctant to take on another classic monster when the same studio suggested he make a move based on the Wolf Man, he found the themes of isolation and disease he was ...
There’s a shot in Wolf Man that’s so good, it’s used twice. A parent and child – first father and son, then mother and daughter – are hiding in a hunter’s deer blind in the damp Oregon woods, cowering ...
The moment we first caught a glimpse of Wolf Man's titular monster during last year's Universal's Halloween Horror Nights, it was clear Blumhouse's take on the iconic character would be divisive.
In Leigh Whannell’s Wolf Man, both the elements of sadness and brutality are in play to great effect and deftly woven together into a thoughtful meditation on the nature of violence in humanity.
His “Wolf Man” is not of that caliber. Like “The Invisible Man,” it is an offering from Universal Pictures that serves as a reboot of a decades-old franchise — 1933 birthed “The ...
Corrections & Clarifications: “Wolf Man” director and co-writer Leigh Whannell's name was incorrect in an earlier version of this article. Pity the werewolf. I mean, duh. You get bitten or ...