WOLF MAN
US, 2025, 103 minutes, Colour.
Christopher Abbott, Julia Garner, Sam Jaeger, Matilda Firth, Benedict Hardie, Zac Chandler.
Directed by Leigh Whannell.
A few years ago, Australian writer-director, Leigh Whannell, who has had a successful career with horror films, the Saw franchise, of the Insidious franchise, directed the remake of The Invisible Man, which was very successful with both critics and box office. He has now followed up with Wolf Man. But, it is not so much in the tradition of the previous Wolf Man horror films but rather a new development, a 21st-century perspective with reference to Native American traditions.
There is quite a contrast between the impact of The Invisible Man and Wolf Man, the visibility and invisibility. A filmmaker can work more subtle variations on horror and terror when the terrorising character is invisible, able to appear or disappear, those terrified not knowing where the invisible man is, present or absent, suddenly menacing. With the Wolf Man, everything is visible. This is very much the case here.
The setting is Oregon, forested mountains and valleys, a recluse taking his young son out hunting, trying to prepare him for the sense of menace and the tradition of a strange creature, somehow or other infected, wolflike manifestations, and, according to the Native American traditions named here, “the face of the Wolf”.
The action, in fact, takes place 30 years later. The young boy, Blake (Christopher Abbott) is npw a writer in New York, married with a young daughter, Ginger (McK enna Roberts) full-time parent, his nervy wife Charlotte (Julia Garner) a journalist. When news comes about the will of his dead father, he suggests they all go to Oregon which will bond them as a family.
As we guess, big mistake!
Most of the film takes place overnight, the family arriving with a huge van for removals lost in the forest, encountering a friend from the past, but suddenly confronted by the mysterious presence. The truck crashes, Blake is scratched and bleeding, Charlotte and Ginger terrified.
So, we see the gradual transformation of Blake into a monstrous version of himself, his daughter terrified, Charlotte able to assert some kind of authority to help.
This is a film of horror with the transformation, gradual and ugly, into the Wolf Man. It is also a film of terror for Charlotte and Ginger. And for audiences who appreciate and respond to this kind of horror and who have an enjoyment of menace and terror, this is what Wolf Man sets out to offer.
- The popularity of Wolf Man stories? Classic films? 21st-century interpretation?
- The beauty of the Oracle mountains and forests, the father and son, their home, the equipment and communication, hunting, the rifles? The stern father, the boy and his attention, fears, going to ship the deer, his father’s reaction, and up on the lookout, his father’s explanations? At home, the effect of the father on the boy? The personality of the Father, war, communications? Then the story of his disappearance?
- 30 years later, New York City, Blake, writer, looking out his daughter, Charlotte, at work, her moods, difficulties at home, phone calls? Blake and his daughter, protecting her, her reading his mind, the meals?
- The news of his father’s will, the suggestion to go to Oregon, the fan, travelling through the forest, the desd end gate, Derek on the lookout, the fears, his friendliness, back story, guiding them to the house? The apparition of the road, swerving, the crash, Derek falling out, being taken away by the creature? The creature, the struggle, Blake being scratched, mother and daughter on the roof of the van, walking through the woods, finding the house, getting the lights going, the threats, locking the door?
- Blake and his transformation, the arm, the blood, Charlotte ending the wound, his later tearing it off, chewing on his arm, the impact on Charlotte, the impact on Ginger? Her age, dependence on her father, not so close to her mother, her mother having to protect her, her being bewildered by the transformation of her father?
- Blake and the further degeneration, his face, the touch of the Wolf, facial hair, the blood, his trying to protect them, Charlotte and her getting the engine going, trying to escape in the car, Blake leading of the creature?
- The revelation that the creature was Blake’s father, the confrontation between the two, the fight, the destruction of the creature? Blake and his death?
- A grim ending, the action taking place overnight, the pessimism of this variation of the Wolf Man story?