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.
Universal Pictures’ highly awaited Wolf Man hit the theatres on the 17th of January 2025. It brings forth a modernized take on the classic Universal Monsters legend.
Abbott said he "laughed immediately" when he saw himself in the full werewolf makeup for the first time. "It's scary and all that stuff, but it's so ridiculous," according to People.
T he secret to making a great wolf man movie -- and you gotta pinky swear not to tell anybody about this, because it's a secret -- is that the "wolf man" part is optional. Werewol
Leigh Whannell, Corbett Tuck, Lauren Schuker Blum, Rebecca Angelo Starring: Christopher Abbott, Julia Garner, Matilda Firth, Sam Jaeger Rated: R for bloody violent content, grisly images and some language.
Leigh Whannell follows ‘The Invisible Man’ with another update on a classic from the Universal archives, unfolding in an isolated farmhouse in the Pacific Northwest.
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 well.
Filmmaker Leigh Whannell directed 2020's intriguing "The Invisible Man," but his latest classic monster redux is a shaggy mess that should have been curbed.
Christopher Abbott didn't have the expected reaction to seeing himself in the mirror for the first time as "the Wolf Man" of Leigh Whannell 's upcoming horror film.
A review of 'Wolf Man' , a reboot of Universal's classic 1941 monster movie starring Christopher Abbott as man who morphs into wolf-like beast
Wolf Man director Leigh Whannell and actors Julia Garner and Christopher Abbott speak to Yahoo UK about the monster movie, and new kind of werewolf.
To be feral is, in a sense, to be free. But not in the new edition of an oft-told story, “Wolf Man,” co-written and directed by “Saw” writer Leigh Whannell and produced by Blumhouse, whose empire of the bloodcurdling stretches across scores of films including 2020’s “Invisible Man,