Four-part docuseries starts as a typical self-congratulatory tribute — then it drills down to specific highs and lows, and totally delivers the goods.
Horror has always been viewed as a genre that doesn't regularly compete for the biggest Oscars, although that isn't quite the ...
“Wolf Man” then jumps ahead 30 years, to adult Blake (Christopher Abbott) out in a busy San Francisco enjoying daddy-daughter ...
There’s a lot of bouncing back and forth between the farmhouse and the barn and the obligatory Rickety Old Pickup Truck with a Dead Battery; at times it’s reminiscent of that insurance commercial with ...
We need more sweet moments and "Teddy Facts of the Day." ...
Leigh Whannell's Wolf Man reboot for Universal is another Blumhouse bore with flat characters and a simple, derivative ...
The wolfman is a terrifying figure in the cultural imagination but in the latest version, its director says it’s a tragic ...
The actor admits the prosthetics took their toll, even though they helped him get into the right headspace for the character: "you feel like you're trapped a little bit, so it's a mental marathon as ...
And now Whannell is back with another standalone revival of a classic Universal Monster in Wolf Man. At one stage, it had Ryan Gosling starring and Derek Cianfrance directing, but it now arrives in ...
He followed the Universal Monsters’ now-classic takes on Dracula, Frankenstein, the Bride of Frankenstein, and the Invisible ...
If Wolf Man is one of Whannell’s more average movies, then the horror world should welcome him doing any and all new Universal Monster reboots.
Director Leigh Whannell makes horror films for grown-ups. Unlike his “Invisible Man” remake, though, this one is a bit of a ...