What many people don’t know is that it’s actually part of Universal Monsters, with its version released in 1943, among three other adaptations. The story, written by Gaston Leroux, tells the ...
Wolf Man begins with a father and son on a hunting trip in which the latter decides to share with his boy some advice about the way of the world. “Dying isn’t hard. It’s the easiest thing in ...
You have to really sell your title as something special or idiosyncratic to get over this box office hump. Universal’s attempts to get Dracula revived haven’t quite cracked that nut.
Or who knows? As long as we’re throwing out theories: The original 1941 version of The Wolf Man is one of the weaker films in the Universal Monsters cycle, and Wolf Man is similarly inferior to ...
Leigh Whannell is back in Universal’s world of classic monsters. Following 2020’s The Invisible Man, the filmmaker returns with Wolf Man, a new, modern take on the 1941 Gothic horror.
It’s also another clever Universal Monster update from filmmaker Leigh Whannell (and Corbett Tuck, his co-writer and wife) after he saw through The Invisible Man and focused on his victim.
Leigh Whannell's The Invisible Man was so good, it (almost) made us forget about the Dark Universe, Universal's failed attempt to revive their classic monsters into a shared universe – which ...