The writer and director of “The Invisible Man,” 21st-century style, is back with an interpretation of another Universal Pictures monster movie, “Wolf Man.”
The werewolf in Wolf Man looks significantly different from previous werewolves in movies, such as 1941's The Wolf Man and 2010's The Wolfman.
Christopher Abbott ("Poor Things") and Julia Garner ("Ozark") play a couple who go back to the husband's family home in Oregon, only to find terror in the woods.
PORTLAND, Ore. ( KOIN) — A Ryan Gosling-produced horror movie that takes place in Oregon has made its world debut. Production company Blumhouse’s “Wolf Man” premiered in theaters worldwide on Jan. 17. Although the film is set in the Pacific Northwest, IMDb lists New Zealand as its shooting location.
When a close friend succumbed to motor neuron disease, Australian filmmaker Leigh Whannell channelled his grief into his latest movie.
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."
Leigh Whannell tempers the scares in Wolf Man, but ups the family melodrama, offering a tragedy in the classic Universal Monster tradition.
Australian creator of the Saw horror series talks about rebooting a werewolf classic and why he never thought Hollywood was his destiny
Universal/Blumhouse's Wolf Man might be set for a ruff time at the box office after taking in a disappointing $4+ million on Friday (including Thursday
“Wolf Man” then jumps ahead 30 years, to adult Blake (Christopher Abbott) out in a busy San Francisco enjoying daddy-daughter time with young Ginger (Matilda Firth). Like his father, he is very protective of his child, scolding her for not getting down from a construction structure she walks atop the moment he tells her to do so.
Blumhouse's Wolf Man delivers a chilling, tragic twist as a family confronts curses, transformations, and a shocking reveal about their past.