Prosthetic designer Arjen Tuiten tells IndieWire about the 5 stages to turning Christopher Abbott into a modern wolf man, all in-camera.
Leigh Whannell's Wolf Man may take a simplistic approach, but its ending opens up a great deal of meaning for Christopher Abbott's tragic monster.
Wolf Man and The Invisible Man both hail from director Leigh Whannell and Universal Studios but are they in the same universe?
The writer-director was partially inspired by a close friend who died of ALS, but ultimatley lost a scene involving the affliction: "That's definitely one that hurt when I took it out."
Wolf Man was called 'pulse-pounding' and 'terrifying' in first reactions, but the Rotten Tomatoes score leaves little to be desired as Leigh Whannell's reimagining of George Waggner's 1941 film currently has an underwhelming score of 56% on review aggregate site, Rotten Tomatoes.
The actor said the fake blood has "a lot of sugar" and the "bone part was, like, white chocolate or something"
A concept artist who worked on Leigh Whannell's Wolf Man has unveiled some of his alternate designs for the titular monster. Are they better, or worse? Have a look and let us
Unfortunately for Blake, he spots a familiar tattoo on the werewolf's arm, revealing that the werewolf was his father. This tragic reveal is a callback and a reversal of the ending of The Wolf Man.
“Wolf Man” tells the story of Blake Lovell (Christopher Abbott), his wife Charlotte (Julia Garner) and their daughter Ginger (Matilda Firth) as they journey from New York City to the wilderness of Oregon to clean out Blake’s father’s house after he passes away.
Jason Blum put a silver bullet in his reaction to Wolf Man‘s box office. Blum, a producer on the Leigh Whannell-directed reboot, broke his silence on the film’s underperformance when he posted — and then deleted — a meme to his social media.
The Leigh Whannell-directed film stars Christopher Abbott and Julia Garner ... Whannell struck thematic and fright-fest gold with a riveting reboot of "The Invisible Man" that made star Elisabeth Moss the victim of a timely monster called toxic masculinity.