Leigh Whannells Wolf Man has created a lot of anticipation around the title monsters appearance and how different the overall story will be from the 1941 horror classic, but Whanells body horror ...
Blumhouse's Wolf Man tries to scare up some tension throughout its story, but a rare horror genre problem leaves the plot ...
Before they make it to the house, though, the car goes careening off the road and Blake (Christopher Abbott) is scratched by ...
The Invisible Man’ director Leigh Whannell transforms the ‘Wolf Man’ into a story of a guy trying to avoid turning into his ...
Here’s how it works. One thing is for sure, Leigh Whannell knows how to create an unmistakably scary movie. I’m sure his newest and most detailed foray into body horror will be the same.
For the record, I watched “Wolf Man” a day after I saw “The Brutalist,” and somehow that film, with its three-and-a-half-hour runtime, was more gripping and had better pacing than this one, which ...
Leigh Whannell’s Wolf Man recognizes that, inner conflicts or not, all werewolf horror is essentially hairier-than-usual body horror. Except this time, you get to see its hapless hero’s ...
Along with its solid focus on the body horror that comes with the monstrous transformation, Wolf Man’s emotional core and inherent tragedy gives it more in common with David Cronenberg’s The ...
With the broad strokes of a great setting, solid acting, and quality direction, an audience will find Wolf Man to be time ...
Wolf Man” successfully startled, shocked and horrified me, but at what cost? What scare factors this film showcased were ...