Julia Garner has proven through her performances in Inventing Anna and Ozark that nothing can separate a good script and her. Garner's acting prowess paired with her knack for choosing excellent scripts has earned her several accolades and the audience's attention to her next move.
Wolf Man and The Invisible Man both hail from director Leigh Whannell and Universal Studios but are they in the same universe?
"I think if you want to make anything scarier just go with something familiar," said Garner in a recent interview with ScreenRant.
The Invisible Man’ director Leigh Whannell transforms the ‘Wolf Man’ into a story of a guy trying to avoid turning into his father.
Wolf Man was called 'pulse-pounding' and 'terrifying' in first reactions, but the Rotten Tomatoes score leaves little to be desired as Leigh Whannell's reimagining of George Waggner's 1941 film currently has an underwhelming score of 56% on review aggregate site, Rotten Tomatoes.
Wolf Man” becomes one of those “hide from the killer” films. When the husband (Christopher Abbott) has a close encounter, something happens with his DNA and soon, he’s losing teeth and exhibiting feral behavior.
Jason Blum put a silver bullet in his reaction to Wolf Man‘s box office. Blum, a producer on the Leigh Whannell-directed reboot, broke his silence on the film’s underperformance when he posted — and then deleted — a meme to his social media.
Sadly, Whannell and his actress wife, Corbett Tuck, have concocted a script so thin it's invisible. Julia Garner in "Wolf Man," 2025. Universal Pictures The setup for this contemporary take on "Wolf Man" would have to go some to qualify as basic.
Julia Garner won three Emmys for her work in “Ozark.” Now, in “Wolf Man,” she plays a woman in peril. What happened?
Julia Garner won three Emmys for her work in ... For starters, she – and others – put too much stock in “The Invisible Man,” the horror film director Leigh Whannell made before this.