watch
Ratings:1 Star2 Stars3 Stars4 Stars5 Stars
Loading ... Loading ...

The Wolfman

Watch The Wolfman Online – Upon his return to his ancestral homeland, an American man is bitten, and subsequently cursed by, a werewolf. Full summary » Put Hugo Weaving and Benicio Del Toro along with Anthony Hopkins in one of the original horror franchises and what do you get? You get The Wolfman, an updated version [...]

Watch The Wolfman Online – Upon his return to his ancestral homeland, an American man is bitten, and subsequently cursed by, a werewolf. Full summary »

Put Hugo Weaving and Benicio Del Toro along with Anthony Hopkins in one of the original horror franchises and what do you get? You get The Wolfman, an updated version making a triumphant return to theatres February 2010. When an American citizen returns to his personal “old country” in search of his missing brother, he finds himself on the bad end of an ancient curse when he’s bitten and ultimately becomes a werewolf. Now, he’s got to not only try and find his missing brother but also get his curse cleared up before he runs afoul of angry villagers or relentless Scotland Yard detectives. Check out the trailer. It’s nice to see Universal getting back into the monster movie game, and if anything could use a modernized coat of paint it’s some of the great classics, of which The Wolfman must be counted among. But will this remake go well for Universal? Or will it just be howlingly bad? The comments section awaits your input–thanks for watching! The Wolfman Cast: Benicio Del Toro, Anthony Hopkins, Emily Blunt, Hugo Weaving, Art Malik The Wolfman movie trailer courtesy Universal Pictures. The Wolfman opens in US theaters February 12th, 2010. The Wolfman is directed by Joe Johnston.
Video Rating: 4 / 5

Release Date: 12 February 2010 (USA)

Genres: Horror,Thriller

Watch The Wolfman online for free. If for some reason it’s not available right now, don’t worry, it will be available soon. Please bookmark this page and come back soon and you’ll see The Wolfman is available to watch online.

Watch Full Movie:
Watch The Wolfman Online at NovaMov
Watch The Wolfman Online at DixvDen
Watch The Wolfman Online at DivxLink
Stream The Wolfman Online at DivxStage
Watch The Wolfman Online at Loombo
Watch The Wolfman Online at Vidreel
Watch The Wolfman Online at Xtshare

Download Online:
Download The Wolfman Online

Download Torrent:
Download The Wolfman via Torrent

Download via Usenet (Click Here for a Free Usenet Account):
Download The Wolfman via Newsgroups

The Wolfman (2-Disc Unrated Director’s Cut) [Blu-ray]

Academy Award® winners Anthony Hopkins (The Silence of the Lambs) and Benicio Del Toro (Traffic) tear up the screen in this action-packed thriller. Lawrence Talbot (Del Toro) is lured back to his family estate to investigate the savage murder of his brother by a bloodthirsty beast. There, Talbot must confront his childhood demons, his estranged father (Hopkins), his brother’s grieving fiancée (Emily Blunt, The Devil Wears Prada) and a suspicious Scotland Yard Inspector (Hugo Weaving, The Mat

Rating: (out of 102 reviews)

List Price: $ 39.98

Price: $ 21.98

The Wolf Man – The Legacy Collection (The Wolf Man / Werewolf of London / Frankenstein Meets the Wolf Man / She-Wolf of London)

For the first time ever, the original The Wolf Man film comes to DVD in this extraordinary Legacy Collection. Included in the collection is the original classic, starring the renowned Lon Chaney Jr., and three timeless sequels, featuring legendary actor Bela Lugosi and others. These are the landmark films that inspired an entire genre of movies and continue to be major influences on motion pictures to this day.

Rating: (out of 61 reviews)

List Price: $ 26.98

Price: $ 18.58




Movie Details:

Director: Joe Johnston
Cast:
  • Simon Merrells
  • Gemma Whelan
  • Emily Blunt
  • Benicio Del Toro
  • Mario Marin-Borquez
  • Asa Butterfield
  • Cristina Contes
  • Anthony Hopkins
  • Art Malik
  • Malcolm Scates
  • Nicholas Day
  • Michael Cronin
  • David Sterne
  • David Schofield
  • Roger Frost
Tagline: When the moon is full the legend comes to life See »
Country: UK , USA



3 Comments

  1. bleedingkiri says:

    Now, i loved the theatrical cut and hailed it as "perfect", but upon finding out there was an extended cut i was more than happy- how could something i already found good become better? Flushes of images of the LOTR extended cuts washed over me and i couldn’t wait- if Johnston put the effort in as Jackson did with his trilogy and made something amazing even better with excellent extended scenes, it would be truly great, especially since there were so many scenes for the film anyway which were cut due to the troubled history of the film and it’s many changes. Well, having finally seen the extended Wolfman, i think it’s good that it’s almost an entire re-cut of the film (and almost completly different to the theatrical), but i don’t think it actually works now and i actually didn’t like it as much as the theatrical! (Though i did love the old-skool Universal logo at the start, which should have stayed in the theatrical, don’t know why they didn’t leave it in!)

    I admire that they have tried to give the first half more weight but it actually works against the movie now, it’s too boggy and heavy now, and dare I say- a little boring as well! It seems as if these scenes have just been shoved in there becuase of the complaints that the first half was too fast, but with little thought of pacing and direction. First half doesn’t seem to go anywhere and is all over the place, it drags on too much and the extra scenes really do not add anything extra to the story or character relationships that the theatrical version didn’t already do. We know there’s something wrong in the house and that eventually Gwen and Larry feel for each other, but these do not need to be emphasised by scenes between them which drag on as they talk about, well, nothing in particular. Giving them more time together doesn’t necessarily mean a relationship is strengthened, especially when they don’t do much in those scenes.

    Just becuase there’s more doesn’t make it better. The theatrical did it and it was more consise and to the point- There’s a death in the family, Gwen writes to Talbot and he comes down, meet and greet, and then we find the troubles and sinister background to the family. Done and done. The extended is pointless banter back and forth between the three principle characters (Gwen, Larry and John) which really doesn’t give any weight to their relationships, in fact i think it worked better in the extended when it’s all done faster becuase the major points are ticked, rather than it going on and on with no susbtance. The theatrical did it better- the scene by the lake where Larry teaches Gwen to through rocks was tiny but i think worked very well- a traditional little scene from the classic days of film where love can be sparked from the smallest of occurrunces (just like in the original Wolfman and the flitying in the Antique Shop). But in the extended it seems that they want to give more substance to their relationship by putting them in more scenes together, but it doesn’t work at all. The theatrical hits the notes better regarding them both.

    I liked the scene on the train though where he gets his cane, that was great, And other small scenes of carnage and gore were good. It’s a shame that we can’t choose what scenes we’d like to view and what not to see with a special DVDBlu-Ray feature, as i’d love to do my own personal cut of the film, especially with all those other extended and deleted scenes.

    Other tiny scenes are okay but again not really needed (like the small shot of the CG werewolf at the start just before it roars into the camera- that was awful, why couldn’t they have used a practical version instead of bad CG?). I was dissapointed to see some of ther other extended London Chase scenes cut out but upon viewing them in the deleted scenes sectin i was glad they weren’t in the film as they were horrible! Lawrence (forgetting he’s a monster) and casually walking going into the ballroom (where everyone mistakes him for a halloween costume) and getting smitten and all puppy dog eyed over the singer becuase it reminds him of Gwen i guess, then causing rampage? Was that a parody joke scene or what? Completly did not fit. He should have barged in there and caused havok, not walk in there calmly and have everyone think that it’s a costume- completly does not work with the vibe of the film (who directed that, it was atrocious). The alternative endings i liked i guess, i thought it was cool that Larry kills Gwen but is still alive himself- but then the camera rushes towards his face and he turns to smile at the camera!? Again, was that a joke or what?

    Dissapointed that these were not in the film but all for the better as the extended cut makes it longer than necessary. So anyway, after consideration i prefer the theatrical as it is faster and to the point, the pace has rhythm and it works better as a tighter film, not baggy and bloated with unecceasry scenes when those scenes already convey (more meaninglessly) that Larry and Gwen feel something for each other and that something bad happened between Larry and John. These were already shown perfectly in the theatrical, more subtely of course but it worked better that way for me. Otherwise the extended version is just too long, and not evened out enough (too long and baggy in the first half becuase of the longer added scenes, resulting in the second half being too fast becuase it’s relativly unchanged). It doesn’t blend together as a whole, becuase now the film is longer with the drama and so needs more scenes of action (of which there really aren’t many to begin with in the first place but that’s fine for the theatrical) but now doesn’t work when the extended cut is longer with the drama, now the action scenes are too little too late.

    Anyway, it’s a long time i’ve been to this board but i did say i would come back upon seeing the extended! It wasn’t as good as i had hoped and i’m slightly gutted, but it doesn’t matter since i still love the theatrical and that’s the version i will most probably always like. I’m glad that they have kept both versions on the Blu-Ray and DVD for future viewing and haven’t automatically regarded the extended version as the "definitive" one now and completly disregared the theatrical. The cinematic version is i think a lot better!

    ~Everything’s true. God’s an astronaut, Oz is over the rainbow & Midian’s where the monsters live

  2. Spider-Lou-Vol2 says:

    Emily Blunt’s brief side boob shot in the dream sequence. Almost as good as the whole boob.

    http://www.imdb.com/user/ur1476309/comments-index?start=0&summary= off&order=date

  3. Antiflarm says:

    Ok. There was a Bear and a Caribou in a few shots of this film. WHY WERE THEY CGI? It looked so bad! Just get a damn Bear, stick in in front of the camera for crying out loud!

    There was just SO much bad CG in this film. Weird too, since the director comes from a practical FX background…