The Wolf Man has been reinvented by Leigh Whannell, though it continues a trend of werewolf movies being criticised for not ...
Leigh Whannell’s Wolf Man manages to strip the genre of its last shreds of dignity, replacing suspense with an onslaught of gore and nonsense.
The Invisible Man’ director Leigh Whannell transforms the ‘Wolf Man’ into a story of a guy trying to avoid turning into his ...
Review - Australian writer-director Leigh Whannell takes a crack at a famous monster - and finds something new, Dan Slevin ...
While there have been a million takes on Dracula and Frankenstein, the Wolf Man is one of the original crown jewels of the Universal Monsters that has been long overdue for a reinvention.
The werewolf that attacks our protagonists in Leigh Whannell's movie actually ended up looking a lot better, and Blake (Christopher Abbott) ultimately transforms into a different beast altogether.
What happened? For starters, she – and others – put too much stock in “The Invisible Man,” the horror film director Leigh Whannell made before this. That had plenty of style – and a ...
Directed by Leigh Whannell, the movie failed to ... Collider's Emma Kiely described it as "a surprising let-down from Whannell, whose decades-long writing career has produced so many compelling ...