Parents need to know that some critics have claimed that this is an anti-feminist movie, but that is a very superficial perspective. There's a flashback to Sean's professional boxing career, in which ...
There’s a shot in Wolf Man that’s so good, it’s used twice. A parent and child – first father and son, then mother and daughter – are hiding in a hunter’s deer blind in the damp Oregon ...
Whether it's investigating the financials of Elon Musk's pro-Trump PAC or producing our latest documentary ... Williams was prior to seeing Better Man, but it’s a biopic that actually feels ...
Leigh Whannell is back in Universal’s world of classic monsters. Following 2020’s The Invisible Man, the filmmaker returns with Wolf Man, a new, modern take on the 1941 Gothic horror.
According to critics’ reviews, which we’ve rounded up below, the new Wolf Man is a howler. The Los Angeles Times: “Wolf Man is a boring body-horror endurance test that mostly takes place in ...
Performances in N.Y.C. Performances in N.Y.C. Advertisement Supported by Theater Review “Show/Boat: A River” reverses the racial lens on the great-grandfather of American musicals. By Jesse ...
“A Different Man” is an urban parable, even an urban myth if one thinks in classical terms—Midas, Tantalus, Oedipus, Prometheus. Regrets, they’ve had a few. So does the protagonist of ...
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 ...
With that in mind, it makes sense that when facing the socially isolating Covid lockdowns – and a subsequent disappointing response to his previous outing (Invisible Man), Leigh Whannell and his ...