The Invisible Man’ director Leigh Whannell transforms the ‘Wolf Man’ into a story of a guy trying to avoid turning into his father.
Wolf Man is an upcoming American supernatural horror film directed by Leigh Whannell from a screenplay by the writing teams of Whannell and Corbett Tuck, and Lauren Schuker Blum and Rebecca Angelo. It is a reboot of the 1941 film The Wolf Man.
Wolf Man”—a reboot of Universal Pictures’ legendary werewolf franchise—appears to be headed to digital streaming. Find out when you can watch it at home.
While 1941's The Wolf Man has influenced countless werewolf movies since its debut, this classic Universal monster movie has several glaring flaws.
Jason Blum put a silver bullet in his reaction to Wolf Man‘s box office. Blum, a producer on the Leigh Whannell-directed reboot, broke his silence on the film’s underperformance when he posted — and then deleted — a meme to his social media.
Wolf Man was called 'pulse-pounding' and 'terrifying' in first reactions, but the Rotten Tomatoes score leaves little to be desired as Leigh Whannell's reimagining of George Waggner's 1941 film currently has an underwhelming score of 56% on review aggregate site, Rotten Tomatoes.
Leigh Whannell’s take on the Lon Chaney Jr. classic stumbled at the box office and was almost immediately overshadowed when Nosferatu’s Robert Eggers announced his own werewolf movie—but it’s still a bold and unsettling domestic horror story worthy of your attention.
It clawed its way to the top. The horror fantasy “Wolf Man” was No. 1 at the box office on its opening day Friday, raking in $4.5 million, according to The Numbers. The flick, a reboot of 1941’s “The Wolf Man,” which was deemed a “dark and toothless January mess,” by IndieWire, is expected to take in $12 million through Monday.
Wolf Man and The Invisible Man both hail from director Leigh Whannell and Universal Studios but are they in the same universe?
Did you like the new Wolf Man and are craving more horror movies just like it? Try streaming these three great movies right now.
Prosthetic designer Arjen Tuiten tells IndieWire about the 5 stages to turning Christopher Abbott into a modern wolf man, all in-camera.
And "Wolf Man," now stalking its way through theaters, is rabid to chew off a sizable chunk of the box office. It just might. I only wish "Wolf Man" was a better movie or even a passable one instead of a limp, lazy excuse for thought-provoking horror that ...