Wolf Man indulges in one of the most overused horror references in the genre's long history, but for once the nod actually makes sense here.
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.
Julia Garner won three Emmys for her work in “Ozark.” Now, in “Wolf Man,” she plays a woman in peril. What happened?
The filmmaker responsible for the new iteration of Wolf Man opened up about the character's transformations and where the idea came from.
"Wolf Man," starring Juila Garner and Christopher Abbott, is a new spin on the classic werewolf movie. Leigh Whannell co-wrote and directed the film.
The writer-director was partially inspired by a close friend who died of ALS, but ultimatley lost a scene involving the affliction: "That's definitely one that hurt when I took it out."
In “Wolf Man,” the primal terror of a man turning into a monster becomes a gripping metaphor for a troubled marriage, as Blake’s transformation mirrors the emotional disintegration of his family.
Wolf Man and The Invisible Man both hail from director Leigh Whannell and Universal Studios but are they in the same universe?
Leigh Whannell’s Wolf Man reimagines the classic monster tale as a tragic family drama, blending raw emotion with visceral horror.
The body horror-fueled creature feature struggles to thread the needle of its family-under-siege premise with a cohesive message.
A ccording to an old parable, we all hold two wolves within. We must feed the good wolf in order to build its strength. Then there’s the werewolf. It lives within as well. And when he comes out to play, bringing humanity’s suppressed animalism to the surface, you can bet there’s a bad moon rising.
President-elect Donald Trump is hoping to make Hollywood “stronger than ever before” by naming Sylvester Stallone, Mel Gibson and Jon Voight as “special ambassadors,” whose goal will be to bring back business lost to “foreign countries.” “It is my honor to announce Jon Voight, Mel Gibson, and Sylvester Stallone, to be Special Ambassadors to a …