Sunday, January 19, 2025

Review: Wolfman 2025

Review: Wolfman 2025

By William Pattison

For Horror Bob's Blog 

 

Gore and scares! Recently I was fortunate enough to have a friend of mine who does a podcast send me a screener he got a the Universal/Blum House reimagining of the classic Universal monster The Wolfman from director Leigh Whannell (The Invisible Man) and starring Christopher Abbott, Julia Garner, and Matilda Firth.

Wolfman tells the story of Blake, a Mr. Mom who lives in the wilds of New York city  with his boss babe journalist wife Charlotte and his daughter Ginger. When Blake gets the final notice from the government that his missing father has been listed as dead, he convinces Charlotte and Ginger to come with him to the remote government run farm his father had been posted at since Blake was a young boy to collect his father’s things.

So, they take a moving van and head up to the cabin. On the way Blake gets lost but luckily his father’s neighbor’s son shows up and offers to direct them to the cabin. But then a werewolf jumps in the road in front of them, which causes Blake to swerve and cause the van to fall down a hill and end up huHeng up in a large tree. The neighbor’s son falls out and is ripped apart by the werewolf. Blake gets his family out of the van on the opposite side from the monster. Blake goes to escape but the werewolf rips the door off the van and cuts him with its claw.

Blake and his family manage to find and get into the cabin. Blake barricades them in the cabin, but he finds out that he is now infected by the werewolf and is being slowly turned into a wolf man himself. Now Charlotte and Ginger must watch helplessly as Blake slowly loses his humanity and becomes a blood thirsty predator.

I have to say I was looking forward to seeing this film because Leigh Whannell said he took inspiration from the original The Wolfman and David Cronenberg’s The Fly. Unfortunately Whannell fails horribly at this and a lot more. The reason why is because though Blake does come off as a sympathetic character, the story overwhelms this with a lot of modern social political bullshit. Blake acts like a good father who cares for and protects his daughter, yet the screenplay makes it out like his actions are wrong and toxic. Also when she is introduced Charlotte comes off and cold towards Blake. She comes home while on the phone yammering away with her editor loudly while Blake is trying to finish dinner. He asks her to take it elsewhere. After she hangs up she condescendingly orders him not to do that again like he was a child. Pretty much throughout the film Charlotte didn’t act like she was in a marriage with Blake. She actually even seemed a bit too clinical during his transformation. It was only at the end when she really showed any emotion towards him. The annoying kid was far more emotional than mommy was.

Also the thing that people actually came to the movie for wasn’t that impressive. Blake’s transformation didn’t scream werewolf. Give me a break! Werewolves are hairy and Blake was bland as shit. Besides the finger nails and fangs at the end there was nothing wolf-like in the transformation. They should have given him a dog muzzle and dog-like ears at the very least, but nothing. Disappointing.

The only good thing in this film was the photography. This film was beautifully shot, but that is it.

So as a long time, my entire life, fan of werewolf films I cannot recommend this film. This film fails in both story because of bullshit woke crap. It fails at being a werewolf film because what Blake became bore no resemblance to a werewolf. You want a good film that does it right watch the Jack Nicholson classic WOLF or even the original The Wolfman and even the 2010 remake of the Wolfman with Benicio Del Toro and Anthony Hopkins. All these are worlds better than this film.

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