Leigh Whannell’s Wolf Man boasts some impressive filmmaking and fresh spins on werewolf lore, but its story lacks bite.
Leigh Whannell, the co-creater of the Saw and Insidious franchises, is back with his take on the classic Wolf Man myth. Sort of.
The director of 'The Invisible Man' creates another effective modern take on one of the iconic Universal Monsters ...
While werewolf movies may not hold quite the same cultural reverence or popularity as other paranormal entities, there are still some great examples out there that define the genre. With Leigh ...
From playing a washed-up rock star in 2010's MacGruber to a gruff psychiatric hospital orderly in last year's Terrifier 3, ...
"And so, with Invisible Man, it was very clear that it was about domestic abuse, and the title ... Wolf Man is Whannell’s second remake from the series. Surely, then, a trilogy is on the cards?
Related reads:Director Leigh Whannell on Making Monsters Like Wolf Man Matter in 2025 There’s a shot in Wolf ... After a documentary-style title card informing the viewer of a Pacific Northwest ...
The production is rated 13+ due to some mature themes, violence, murder (it’s right there in the title),romantic kiss ... and "Pantera" (Jan. 10); "Wolf Man," "September 5" and "One of Them ...
By Tim Lammers Also among Universal’s classic monster movies was The Wolf Man—starring Lon Chaney Jr. in the title role—which was released in 1941. After that, Chaney’s werewolf character ...
Wolf Man director Leigh Whannell explains the movie’s scariest scene, and reveals how it harks back to a horror classic.