"Wolf Man," starring Juila Garner and Christopher Abbott tries a new spin on the classic werewolf movie. Lee Whannell ...
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 ...
Leigh Whannell returns to the Universal vein with Wolf Man, shooting this werewolf tale full of modern anxiety.
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 ...
The writer-director tells IndieWire how his reinvention of a Universal horror icon reflected his own fears and anxieties ...
No Larry Talbot, and no cool old gypsy woman talking about when the Wolf Bane blooms, but it's still "Wolf Man." ...
Leigh Whannell's Wolf Man offers a daring and modern reinterpretation of the 1941 Universal classic, abandoning traditional werewolf tropes for a more visceral and tragic transform ...
Leigh Whannell follows his thrilling Invisible Man with a curiously dull, murky, and undercooked Wolf Man, in theaters now.
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.
Director Leigh Whannell explains exclusively to RadioTimes.com why he wanted to use prosthetics for the new film.
Julia Garner stars as a weary wife to Christopher Abbott, who might be transforming into a savage animal, in this cabin-in-the-woods thriller.
It’s scary, it’s hairy, and it’s the latest Blumhouse film to hit the big screen: Wolf Man. Hitting theaters today, Wolf Man ...