
THE WOLFMAN
Restoring A Classic He has been given countless names by scores of
cultures over thousands of years. There has long been
a global fascination with the mythological creature
known as the lycanthrope, a human with the unnatural
ability to transform into a wolf-like creature
when the moon is full. From the myths of the ancient
Greeks to documentation by Gervase of Tilbury in
1212's "Otia Imperialia,” horror stories about werewolves
have dominated world cultures for centuries.
But it has only been in the past seven decades that
the creature was committed to film. In 1935, Universal
released Werewolf of London, from director Stuart
Walker, but it was 1941's classic The Wolf Man that
firmly established the modern cinematic myth of the
werewolf. The film created a lasting iconic character in
the tragic figure of a wayward nobleman by the name
of Lawrence Talbot, played by Lon Chaney, Jr., son of
silent film icon Lon Chaney, star of The Phantom of the
Opera and The Hunchback of Notre Dame.
Directed by George Waggner from an original
screenplay by Curt Siodmak, The Wolf Man was
Universal's latest creature film in an era that
spawned imagination and nightmares. The Talbot
character went on to reappear in films for the studio
including Frankenstein Meets the Wolf Man, House of
Frankenstein, House of Dracula and Abbott &
Costello Meet Frankenstein.
While the original, with its tagline of "His
hideous howl a dirge of death!” became an instant
classic, at only 70 minutes in run time, it was quite a
short monster movie. It solidified the fame of star
Lon Chaney, Jr. and included cameos from additional
Universal "monsters,” including The Invisible Man's
Claude Rains as Sir John Talbot and Dracula's Bela
Lugosi as the gypsy who discovers the curse that's
been leveled upon Lawrence.
Actor/producer Benicio Del Toro has long been a
fan of this genre and began to consider paying homage
to the film with his manager and producer, Rick Yorn.
Yorn explains his interest in beginning the project:
"Growing up, these monster films really had an effect
on my brothers and me. When I first came out to
Hollywood, I wanted to remake one of the old movies.
A few years ago, when Benicio and I were walking out
of his house, I saw the one-sheet for The Wolf Man. It
shows a close-up of Lon Chaney, Jr. as the monster. I
looked at the poster, then back at Benicio—who had a
full beard at the time—and said, ‘How would you feel
about remaking The Wolf Man?'”
Del Toro was very interested in paying homage to
the genre he'd loved since he was a boy. While he realized
that would require him going deep into the
makeup and prosthetics it would take to pull off the
signature look of the creature, he was game for the
challenge. "Frankenstein, Dracula, The Mummy…
when I was a kid, I watched these movies,” Del Toro
explains. "My earliest recollection of acting was
watching Lon Chaney, Jr. play the Wolf Man. We
wanted to honor this classic movie and the Henry
Hull movie Werewolf of London. We knew it would be
exciting to make it in the classic, handcrafted way.”
Del Toro didn't want to
remake the film frame by
frame, but rather update it for
modern audiences. He felt the
story screenwriters Andrew
Kevin Walker and David Self
created "gave the movie some
twists and turns and a modern
edge, while still honoring the
original story.”
Del Toro and Yorn set about
getting the project off the
ground and, during a dinner
with producer Scott Stuber, the
men decided it was time this
classic was updated. "We have put in a few twists, but
we wanted to honor the original,” says Stuber. "The
Wolf Man is so iconic because, on some level, he is
within us. Every person feels a sense of rage. Each of
us feels a sense of that time when we went too far, got
too angry, did something we shouldn't h
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