Wolf Man
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Movie Info & Cast
Synopsis
A man must protect himself and his family when they are being stalked, terrorized, and haunted by a deadly werewolf at night during a full moon.
Cast
- Julia Garner
- Christopher Abbott
- Sam Jaeger
- Matilda Firth
- Benedict Hardie
- Ben Prendergast
- Milo Cawthorne
- Beatriz Romilly
- Zac Chandler
Letterboxd User Reviews
- Jan 16, 2025
unfortunately, daddy has that dog in him :(
Marshall 🧸Jan 14, 2025As soon as the movie ended and the screen went dark, just before the credits started to roll, a large "L" appeared on the screen before fading into the director's name. That is also the most succinct review anyone could give this thing.
David AnthonyJan 16, 2025I mean this guy is great...but he's no taylor lautner
timtamtitus - Jan 14, 2025
Woof.
Sydney🚀Jan 17, 2025Glimmers of something special, especially when it plays with POV and sound, but if you’re going to do an impression of The Fly, you should probably care more about your characters. Full review on YouTube here.
Joe AJan 16, 2025Some great tension here, but man a lot of misused time and slowing down to explain the allegory that was clear as day from the first 10 minutes of the movie multiple times. Awoooo: https://youtu.be/0s6H2EgcQ64
Amanda the Jedi - Jan 15, 2025
yeah had a bad night like this once
dhanineJan 16, 2025Looks more like a Chernobyl victim than a wolf man. Did Leigh Whannell just want to do a remake of The Fly instead? I want Universal Monster movies. Not Universal Monsters As Commentary For Generational Trauma movies
JayShmoneyJan 14, 2025Does an awful lot with relatively little.
matt lynch
Queue Community Reviews
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The true horror was the size of that damn spider, and how nobody killed it 😰. Anyway, looks and sounds great on the big screen, but not as intense as Invisible Man.
Honestly, this hit. It had some creepy moments, but wasn’t as creepy as I wanted it to be. I really enjoyed the transformation but some areas of the story were definitely lacking. Had some shocking moments, left me pleased. I would see this again. Great in theatres.
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Best werewolf movie in a long time. Whannell’s direction is great, the setting is intoxicating, and the slow transformation body horror approach was executed horrifyingly. It injected some fresh ideas into the lore and keep an eye out for some delicious modern horror homages.
A slow Horror Thriller that has a dark vision for a classic monster but doesn’t have much to take a bite of besides enhanced sound design.
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I was hoping for so much more, especially from Leigh Whannell. 'The Invisible Man' and 'Upgrade' are some of my favourite psychological thrillers, from a production design aspect, and story. Most of his work seems to centre around forms of abuse, you can definitely sense that through the painfully…
Had high hopes. Didn’t live up to my expectations. It’s basically the same movie as the beast within just another non-werewolf movie about childhood trauma and the cycle of abuse. the “werewolf” and I use that term loosely design isn’t good it’s more of a zombie virus/body horror
I love the practical and visual effects so much! The monster was cool tk see and my boyfriend, a horror fan hater, actually fking enjoyed it! We had a blast!It had its slowburn to establish setting, and then you just hop right in to the ride it is! definitely would recommend it!
Atom User Reviews
The most stupid attempt of a werewolf movie, the wolfman, looked like a zombie with Botox and rabies. Low budget.
It left too much to the imagination. I left with so many unanswered questions. Not well written. The characters lacked lusters. Too many unnecessary long scenes. Wolfman looked like a mix of an ape from planet of the apes and zombies, I never saw a wolf. I’m annoyed that I paid to see it. It’s stream at home worthy but not big screen worthy.
Metacritic
In one sense, Wolf Man is a generic, and not especially scary, cabin-in-the-woods frightener that leans too often on tenebrous lighting and ear-shredding sound effects. . . Yet the extreme pathos of Blake’s plight is palpable, and Whannell is determined to make us feel it.
Just as Whannell breathed new life into the story of “The Invisible Man” in 2020, he offers a fresh and grotesquely chilling take on the well-trodden storyline of the man who becomes ... something else.
The special effects, when they kick in, are impressive, and the gore hounds in the audience will eventually get their gobbets of flesh, but the messaging of “Wolf Man” is so muddy that it’s not clear what the movie’s trying to say.