Skip to main content

Wolf Man review: Woof!

Christopher Abbott stares back at Julia Garner, his mouth caked in blood, in a still from the movie Wolf Man.
Christopher Abbott in Wolf Man Universal Pictures / Universal Pictures
Wolf Man review: Woof!
“Wolf Man quickly settles into a dour, curiously unimaginative funk.”
Pros
  • A few stylish flourishes
  • The prologue is promisingly ominous
Cons
  • The imagery is underlit
  • The performances are flat
  • It's neither scary nor exciting

Stanley Kubrick famously shot the indoor scenes of his lavish costume drama Barry Lyndon by candlelight. Not to be outdone, Aussie filmmaker Leigh Whannell has now made a monster movie that often appears to have been shot by nothing but the glow of the moon. Okay, so our big satellite in the sky is probably not actually what illuminates the wolfman of Wolf Man, a father and husband who — like the caretaker of Kubrick’s haunted hotel — goes feral on his family in woodland isolation. But a strictly lunar light source would explain why it’s so damn difficult to make out anything that happens in this movie. The abandoned Dark Universe lives on through the sheer duskiness of Whannell’s imagery. Pray your local multiplex runs its projector bulbs on the brightest possible setting.

Recommended Videos

Though dimming the lights is a common strategy for obscuring not-so-special effects — you can’t scoff at what you can’t see! — Wolf Man has nothing to hide in that department, at least for a while. The makeup work used to slowly shag-up Christopher Abbott is convincing enough in its sharpening points and creeping tufts. Most of the movie takes place at a secluded farmhouse in Oregon — the childhood home to which Abbott’s Blake Lovell has returned to sort through the affairs of his father, long missing and finally presumed dead. After he’s bitten by something furry en route, Blake begins to change, much to the mounting terror of his wife, Charlotte (Julia Garner), and their daughter, Ginger (Matilda Firth).

Do all men become their fathers over time, as surely as they get hair where there was no hair before? Blake inherits more than a rickety property from pops, just as this Wolf Man inherits daddy issues from both its predecessors, the 1941 classic starring Lon Chaney and the 2010 version starring Benicio del Toro. Here, lycanthropy is a metaphor for a bad temper. We see that in the prologue, an ominous hunting trip that establishes the oppressive parental intensity Blake endured and absorbed as a boy. Cut to present day, and he’s a sensitive, enlightened city slicker, oversized stuffed bear in one paw, his daughter’s in the other. But the cycle of brooding masculinity is not, he discovers, so easily broken.

Matilda Firth and Julia Garner look scared in the woods in a still from the movie Wolf Man.
Matilda Firth and Julia Garner in Wolf Man Universal Pictures / Universal Pictures

The setup is promising, dramatically and atmospherically. And then the family gets to that old house, and the movie settles into a curiously unimaginative funk. This Wolf Man is like a rough draft of itself, murky in more than its visuals. Whannell has cited David Cronenberg’s goopy masterpiece The Fly as an inspiration for its scenes of messy mutation — the detaching nails and teeth that marked last year’s The Substance as another oozing offspring of that ’80s body-horror milestone. But Wolf Man is neither gross nor humane enough to earn the comparison. It doesn’t endear us to poor, sick-as-a-dog Blake the way Cronenberg did to a bugging-out Jeff Goldblum. We don’t really get to know the man behind the wolf.

The actors seem as stranded as their characters. Whannell, returning to the single setting, tight timeframe, and claustrophobic tension of his breakout screenplay for Saw, never gives them the space to develop into multi-dimensional people. Because Wolf Man treats lycanthropy as a one-way voyage — there’s no anguished return to a human state, no panicked wait for the rise of the next moon — Abbott basically disappears into his prosthetics, robbed of all but the faintest glimmers of discernible consciousness. And rarely has Garner seemed so disconnected from a role; her dread was thicker and more credible in The Royal Hotel, where she played a woman fending off a less supernatural breed of stalking male predator.

Christopher Abbott writhes on the floor and reaches for a hammer in a still from the movie Wolf Man.
Christopher Abbott in Wolf Man Universal Pictures / Universal Pictures

You watch Wolf Man and wonder how it could come from the same filmmaker who so thrillingly upgraded another Universal Monster for the big screen. His last movie, The Invisible Man, was smart and scary and topical — a popcorn horror flick that turned the translucent title menace into an avatar of tech-bro misogyny. (How spookily serendipitous that this tale of a wealthy, gaslighting abuser rose from the ashes of a Johnny Depp vehicle.) His Wolf Man is not devoid of ideas, but its meditation on how paternal protectiveness can morph overnight into overbearing tyranny never takes an especially coherent shape. And there are only quick flashes of Whannell’s virtuosity as a craftsman, like a car crash that affixes the camera to a tumbling SUV, or the way the director visualizes Blake’s mental deterioration as a phantom realm of distorted voices and ethereal fog.

It’s as if Whannell never figured the film out or really pushed beyond his basic outline for a horror movie about lineage, fatherhood, and terminal disease. The nagging impression of incompletion goes, too, for the final-stage monster design. Every werewolf picture worth its weight in silver gives us a good transformation scene, but by the end of Abbott’s knuckle-shifting, jaw-distending makeover into a mangy mutt, you’re left with something too manlike and unmemorable. This is the Wolf Man of legend? Chaney’s was scarier and more elaborate, too. The beast here looks half-conceived, and so does his movie, a rather dull, dreary creature feature seemingly arrested at the crescent stage of its development.

Wolf Man is now playing in theaters everywhere. For more of A.A. Dowd’s writing, visit his Authory page.

A.A. Dowd
A.A. Dowd, or Alex to his friends, is a writer and editor based in Chicago. He has held staff positions at The A.V. Club and…
Masters of the Universe cast: Who is playing He-Man and Teela?
He-Man and Teela stand next to each other and stare.

Masters of the Universe has found its Teela.

Per Deadline, Camila Mendes has been cast as the warrior Teela, the Captain of Eternia's Royal Guard responsible for protecting the royal family. Mendes joins previously announced Nicholas Galitzine, who will star as Prince Adam, a member of the royal family who is secretly the superhero He-Man.

Read more
7 biggest flaws of the most popular movie franchises, ranked
Jake Sully in "Avatar: The Way of Water."

There are some movies, such as Citizen Kane, The Godfather, and Casablanca, that many people agree are perfect motion pictures. But no matter what anyone says, no film can ever be truly flawless.

At least one error always makes it into the finished product, and once the initial hype dies down after a movie's release, these flaws only grow more and more noticeable, especially as people's ideas and standards change. So while they may have achieved massive acclaim in their heydays, these seven film franchises still have a fatal flaw that needs addressing.
7. Avatar -- It uses an outdated white savior narrative

Read more
Which Marvel villains should be in Tom Holland’s Spider-Man 4?
Tom Holland as Spider-Man in "Spider-Man: Homecoming."

The MCU has plenty of upcoming projects that fans are excited about, but a potential fourth entry in Tom Holland's Spider-Man series is near the list's top. 2021's Spider-Man: No Way Home ended with Holland's Peter entering a new phase in his life. Forgotten by the world and with no one left by his side, Peter is now closer to the perpetually down-on-his-luck version from the comics that fans have come to know and love. The ending is the perfect setup for a new Spidey adventure, with Spider-Man acting as the street-level hero he was always supposed to be. But who should he fight in his new adventure, especially now that he has no Avengers or Avengers-adjacent allies by his side?

Well, the possibilities are limitless. After all, Spider-Man has some of the best and most iconic villains in Marvel comics, and while many have already appeared in the Web Slinger's numerous live-action projects, some remain untouched by the film industry. From fearsome crime bosses to chameleonic supervillains, these infamous foes would make worthy enemies for Holland's Spider-Man.
Chameleon

Read more