This one is mostly a triumph of casting. Jack Nicholson’s publishing lifer Will Randall is fair-minded and soft-spoken. Then a wolf bites him on a snowy Vermont road (under a full moon ...
Review - Australian writer-director Leigh Whannell takes a crack at a famous monster - and finds something new, Dan Slevin ...
both (the Jack Nicholson/Michelle Pfeiffer potboiler Wolf). Sometimes this full-moon fever is seen as liberating. Other times it’s a painful affliction. Rarely is it subtext. And since the gory ...
Book editor Will Randall (Nicholson) is living a normal existence before that fateful night some wolf bites him. After that encounter, he gets a new surge of energy flowing through his veins.
Jack Nicholson is Will Randle, an editor-in-chief at a New York publishing house who, after a recent merger, is on his way out. One night, he gets bitten by a wolf and finds himself gradually ...
aging publisher Will Randall (Jack Nicholson) is at the end of his rope when a younger co-worker snatches his job out from under his nose. But after being bitten by a wolf, Will suddenly finds ...
Jack Nicholson is singular for many reasons ... Even when he was slumping (e.g. in the mid-1990s with "Wolf," "The Crossing Guard," "Blood and Wine," "The Evening Star," and the initially ...