The Wolf Man is a 1941 American gothic horror film written by Curt Siodmak and produced and directed by George Waggner. The film stars Lon Chaney Jr. in the title role. Claude Rains, Warren William, Ralph Bellamy, Patric Knowles, Bela Lugosi, Evelyn Ankers, and Maria Ouspenskaya star in supporting roles. The title character has had a great deal of influence on Hollywood's depictions of the legend of the werewolf.[2] The film is the second Universal Pictures werewolf film, preceded six years earlier by the less commercially successful Werewolf of London (1935). This film is part of the Universal Monsters movies and is of great cinematic acclaim for its production.

Larry Talbot returns to his ancestral home in Llanwelly, Wales, to bury his recently deceased brother and reconcile with his estranged father, Sir John Talbot. Larry falls in love with a local girl named Gwen Conliffe who runs an antique shop. As an excuse to talk to her, he purchases a walking stick decorated with a silver wolf's head. Gwen tells him that it represents a werewolf, a man who changes into a wolf "at certain times of the year". The werewolf always sees a pentagram on the palm of his next victim. Various villagers recite a poem whenever werewolves are mentioned:


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Bela's mother, Maleva, reveals to Larry that the wolf which bit him was Bela in the form of a wolf, and Larry is now a werewolf too because he was bitten by one. Silver is the only thing that can kill a werewolf. Maleva gives him a charm to prevent the transformation. Uncertain whether to believe her, he instead gives the charm to Gwen for protection.

Like Maleva warned, Larry transforms into a humanoid wolf hybrid on the following night and kills a villager. He returns to normal the next morning with no memory of his rampage. Authorities believe the killing to be the work of a wolf; they set traps and send out hunting parties. The next night, Larry turns into a werewolf and is caught in one of the traps. Maleva uses a spell to temporarily change him back to human form, allowing him to free himself before a hunting party finds him.

Now convinced he is a werewolf, a distraught Larry decides to leave town. When he says his goodbye to Gwen, he sees a pentagram on her palm. He tells his father he is a werewolf and killed Bela and the villager, but his father thinks Larry is delusional and ties him to a chair to prevent him from leaving and prove to him he is not a werewolf. When the moon rises Larry transforms again, breaks free of his restraints, and attacks Gwen. Not recognizing the werewolf as his son, Sir John bludgeons him over the head with Larry's silver-headed cane which Larry gave him. Maleva arrives and again uses the spell. Sir John and Gwen watch in horror as the dead werewolf transforms into Larry's human corpse.

As with other werewolf films, The Wolf Man has been analyzed as an allegory for puberty.[5] In his 2012 book Horror and the Horror Film, Kawin wrote: "The fear of sexual passion and its ability to bring chaos is part of the arsenal of anxiety inherent to puberty, and the werewolf does, as has been widely noted, grow hair and become subject to animalistic drives as if it were going through puberty. In The Wolf Man (1941) as well as in Cat People (1942), desire is dangerous. The monster is one's animal nature, out of control and making one behave like an animal."[6]

Chaney did not undergo an on-screen facial transformation from man to wolf in the original film, as featured in all sequels. The lap-dissolve progressive makeups were seen only in the final ten minutes and were presented discreetly. In the first transformation, Larry removes his shoes and socks. His feet are seen to grow hairy and become huge paws (courtesy of uncomfortable "boots" made of hard rubber, covered in yak hair). In the final scene, the werewolf gradually returns to Larry Talbot's human form through the standard technique.

Stories about the makeup and transformation scenes have become legendary and are mostly apocryphal. The transformation of Chaney from man into a monster was certainly laborious; the entirety of the makeup took five to six hours to apply and an hour to remove.[9] Jack Pierce had initially designed it for Henry Hull in Werewolf of London (1935), but Hull argued that the disguise made no sense within the plot since "Dr. Glendon" needed to be recognizable by the characters even in his werewolf form. Pierce was ordered to design a second version which left more of Hull's face recognizable. Pierce then recycled his original design for the 1941 film.

The Wolf Man is the only Universal monster to be played by the same actor in all his 1940s film appearances. Lon Chaney Jr. was very proud of this, frequently stating in interviews that the Wolf Man was his 'baby'.[34] The Wolf Man is listed in the film reference book 1001 Movies You Must See Before You Die, which stated that the film 'remains the most recognizable and most cherished version of the [werewolf] myth'.[35]

"Wolf" stars Jack Nicholson as a top editor for a New York publishing house, who is bitten by a wolf and begins to turn into a werewolf, just as a billionaire tycoon buys the company and replaces Nicholson with a back-stabbing yuppie. Nicholson, snarling with rage, bites the yuppie, who also begins to grow hair and fangs. The result is a canny portrait of the emotional climate in the New York publishing industry.

The movie contains most of the materials of traditional werewolf movies. Much significance is attached to the full moon, and horses shy away when Nicholson comes near, and his sense of smell develops to the point where he can tell that a man had tequila for his breakfast. There is of course the obligatory eccentric old scientist with the foreign accent, who explains werewolves to Nicholson. And beautiful women to be his lovers and/or victims.

But "Wolf" is both more and less than a traditional werewolf movie. Less, because it doesn't provide the frankly vulgar thrills and excesses some audience members are going to be hoping for. And more, because Nicholson and his director, Mike Nichols, are halfway serious about exploring what might happen if a New York book editor did become a werewolf.

Like many Nichols movies, "Wolf" gains by surrounding the story with sharply seenplaces and details. The publishing house inhabits a classic old architectural landmark with an open atrium (ideal for a wolf who wants to eavesdrop), and other action takes place at the millionaire's estate, with its vast lawns and forests, its Gothic main house, and its rambling outbuildings and guest cottages. The atmosphere adds to the effect; it would be difficult to stage a werewolf story in a condo.

What is a little amazing is that this movie allegedly cost $70 million. It is impossible to figure where the money all went, even given the no-doubt substantial above-the-line salaries. The special effects are efficient but not sensational, the makeup by Rick Baker is convincing but wisely limited, and the movie looks great, but that doesn't cost a lot of money. What emerges is an effective attempt to place a werewolf story in an incongruous setting, with the closely observed details of that setting used to make the story seem more believable. Nicholson is very good with the material (some of his line readings are balancing acts of the savage and the sublime), but this material can only take him, and us, so far.

Freddy Lupin is one in a long family line of famous werewolves and he's sure he'll be able to live up to the family legacy. Unfortunately, on his first werewolf outing his inexplicably turned into a poodle! What will he do now??

If, to the contrary, you want to be put in a dream-like state, The Company of Wolves is the werewolf movie for you. It's quite literally the documentation of a creepy dream...and it's every bit as ethereal as it sounds.

Admit it: You've been curious about the ever-growing legion of Twilight fans for a while now. In Breaking Dawn (the fourth movie), our favorite vampire and werewolf are implicated in new and unexpected adventures involving a marriage, a honeymoon, and the birth of a new baby.

The upcoming werewolf movie has unleashed its official trailer this week, giving us our first look at Furlong, Wallace, and Duvall in the film, along with Chiko Mendez in the lead role.

#20 Wolfen (1981)  77% #20 Adjusted Score: 78808% Critics Consensus: Police procedural meets werewolf flick in Wolfen, a creepy creature feature with a surprisingly profound side. Synopsis: New York City police investigator Dewey Wilson (Albert Finney) is trying to solve a series of grisly deaths in which... [More] Starring: Albert Finney, Diane Venora, Gregory Hines, Edward James Olmos Directed By: Michael Wadleigh 

 #19 The Werewolf of London (1935)  77% #19 Adjusted Score: 78782% Critics Consensus: No consensus yet. Synopsis: While in Tibet researching a mysterious flower that purportedly takes its strength from the moon, botanist Wilfred Glendon (Henry Hull)... [More] Starring: Henry Hull, Warner Oland, Valerie Hobson, Lester Matthews Directed By: Stuart Walker 

 #18 Wolf (1994)  62% #18 Adjusted Score: 66193% Critics Consensus: Wolf misses the jugular after showing flashes of killer instinct early on, but engaging stars and deft direction make this a unique horror-romance worth watching. Synopsis: After being bitten by a wolf in rural Vermont, aging book editor Will Randall (Jack Nicholson) finds himself full of... [More] Starring: Jack Nicholson, Michelle Pfeiffer, James Spader, Kate Nelligan Directed By: Mike Nichols 

 #17 WolfCop II (2016)  65% #17 Adjusted Score: 56267% Critics Consensus: No consensus yet. Synopsis: An alcoholic cop experiences blackouts and starts turning into a werewolf when the full moon appears in the sky.... [More] Starring: Leo Fafard, Amy Matysio, Jonathan Cherry, Yannick Bisson Directed By: Lowell Dean 

 #16 Frankenstein Meets the Wolfman (1943)  25% #16 Adjusted Score: 26478% Critics Consensus: No consensus yet. Synopsis: Lawrence Stewart Talbot (Lon Chaney Jr.) is plagued by a physical oddity that turns him into a crazed werewolf after... [More] Starring: Lon Chaney Jr., Bela Lugosi, Ilona Massey, Patric Knowles Directed By: Roy William Neill 

 #15 The Curse of the Werewolf (1961)  60% #15 Adjusted Score: 39340% Critics Consensus: No consensus yet. Synopsis: A man with brutal and macabre origins, Leon Corledo (Oliver Reed) was raised in the home of Don Alfredo Corledo... [More] Starring: Clifford Evans, Oliver Reed, Yvonne Romain, Catherine Feller Directed By: Terence Fisher 

 #14 Silver Bullet (1985)  41% #14 Adjusted Score: 42338% Critics Consensus: No consensus yet. Synopsis: When a series of unexplained murders occurs in the normally quiet town of Tarker's Mill, the residents decide to hunt... [More] Starring: Gary Busey, Corey Haim, Megan Follows, Everett McGill Directed By: Dan Attias 

 #13 Teen Wolf (1985)  42% #13 Adjusted Score: 44508% Critics Consensus: Though Michael J. Fox is as charismatic as ever, Teen Wolf's coming-of-age themes can't help but feel a little stale and formulaic. Synopsis: When high school nerd Scott Howard (Michael J. Fox) learns from his father, Harold (James Hampton), that being a werewolf... [More] Starring: Michael J. Fox, James Hampton, Scott Paulin, Susan Ursitti Directed By: Rod Daniel 

 #12 Van Helsing (2004)  24% #12 Adjusted Score: 31389% Critics Consensus: A hollow creature feature that suffers from CGI overload. Synopsis: Famed monster slayer Gabriel Van Helsing (Hugh Jackman) is dispatched to Transylvania to assist the last of the Valerious bloodline... [More] Starring: Hugh Jackman, Kate Beckinsale, Richard Roxburgh, David Wenham Directed By: Stephen Sommers 

 #11 The Twilight Saga: New Moon (2009)  29% #11 Adjusted Score: 38167% Critics Consensus: The Twilight Saga's second installment may satisfy hardcore fans of the series, but outsiders are likely to be turned off by its slow pace, relentlessly downcast tone, and excessive length. Synopsis: After the abrupt departure of Edward (Robert Pattinson), her vampire love, Bella (Kristen Stewart) finds comfort in her deepening friendship... [More] Starring: Kristen Stewart, Robert Pattinson, Taylor Lautner, Ashley Greene Directed By: Chris Weitz 

 #10 The Wolf of Snow Hollow (2020)  90% #10 Adjusted Score: 93738% Critics Consensus: The Wolf of Snow Hollow treads somewhat unsteadily between horror and comedy, but writer-director-star Jim Cummings' unique sensibilities make for an oddly haunting hybrid. Synopsis: A stressed-out police officer struggles not to give in to the paranoia that grips his small mountain town as bodies... [More] Starring: Jim Cummings, Riki Lindhome, Robert Forster, Jimmy Tatro Directed By: Jim Cummings 

 #9 Werewolves Within (2021)  86% #9 Adjusted Score: 92906% Critics Consensus: Werewolves Within is the rare horror comedy that offers equal helpings of either genre -- and adds up to a whole lot of fun in the bargain. Synopsis: After a proposed pipeline creates divisions within the small town of Beaverfield, and a snowstorm traps its residents together inside... [More] Starring: Sam Richardson, Milana Vayntrub, George Basil, Sarah Burns Directed By: Josh Ruben 

 #8 Underworld (2003)  31% #8 Adjusted Score: 36428% Critics Consensus: Though stylish to look at, Underworld is tedious and derivative. Synopsis: Under cover of night, vampires engage in an age-old battle with their sworn enemies, the Lycans, a clan of violent... [More] Starring: Kate Beckinsale, Scott Speedman, Michael Sheen, Shane Brolly Directed By: Len Wiseman 

 #7 Ginger Snaps II: Unleashed (2004)  88% #7 Adjusted Score: 52728% Critics Consensus: No consensus yet. Synopsis: A patient (Tatiana Maslany) at a rehabilitation center tries to prevent a young woman (Emily Perkins) from transforming into a... [More] Starring: Emily Perkins, Katharine Isabelle, Tatiana Maslany, Janet Kidder Directed By: Brett C. Sullivan 

 #6 The Howling (1981)  74% #6 Adjusted Score: 77644% Critics Consensus: The Howling packs enough laughs into its lycanthropic carnage to distinguish it from other werewolf entries, with impressive visual effects adding some bite. Synopsis: In Los Angeles, television journalist Karen White (Dee Wallace) is traumatized in the course of aiding the police in their... [More] Starring: Dee Wallace, Patrick Macnee, Dennis Dugan, Christopher Stone Directed By: Joe Dante 

 #5 Dog Soldiers (2002)  81% #5 Adjusted Score: 81618% Critics Consensus: Frightening, funny, and packed with action, Dog Soldiers is well worth checking out for genre fans -- and marks writer-director Neil Marshall as a talent to keep an eye on. Synopsis: During a routine nighttime training mission in the Scottish Highlands, a small squad of British soldiers expected to rendezvous with... [More] Starring: Sean Pertwee, Kevin McKidd, Emma Cleasby, Liam Cunningham Directed By: Neil Marshall 

 #4 The Company of Wolves (1985)  85% #4 Adjusted Score: 86126% Critics Consensus: No consensus yet. Synopsis: Wolves and werewolves lurk throughout the dreams of young Rosaleen (Sarah Patterson), who imagines that she must journey through a... [More] Starring: Angela Lansbury, David Warner, Sarah Patterson, Graham Crowden Directed By: Neil Jordan 

 #3 Ginger Snaps (2000)  90% #3 Adjusted Score: 91666% Critics Consensus: The strong female cast and biting satire of teenage life makes Ginger Snaps far more memorable than your average werewolf movie -- or teen flick. Synopsis: The story of two outcast sisters, Ginger (Katharine Isabelle) and Brigitte (Emily Perkins), in the mindless suburban town of Bailey... [More] Starring: Emily Perkins, Katharine Isabelle, Kris Lemche, Mimi Rogers Directed By: John Fawcett 

 #2 An American Werewolf in London (1981)  89% #2 Adjusted Score: 94805% Critics Consensus: Terrifying and funny in almost equal measure, John Landis' horror-comedy crosses genres while introducing Rick Baker's astounding make-up effects. Synopsis: David (David Naughton) and Jack (Griffin Dunne), two American college students, are backpacking through Britain when a large wolf attacks... [More] Starring: David Naughton, Jenny Agutter, Griffin Dunne, John Woodvine Directed By: John Landis 

 #1 The Wolf Man (1941)  91% #1 Adjusted Score: 96963% Critics Consensus: A handsomely told tale with an affecting performance from Lon Chaney, Jr., The Wolf Man remains one of the classics of the Universal horror stable. Synopsis: When his brother dies, Larry Talbot (Lon Chaney) returns to Wales and reconciles with his father (Claude Rains). While there,... [More] Starring: Lon Chaney Jr., Claude Rains, Ralph Bellamy, Evelyn Ankers Directed By: George Waggner e24fc04721

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