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The Wolfman (Original Motion Picture Soundtrack) is the score album to the 2010 film of the same name directed by Joe Johnston, which is a remake on the 1941 film The Wolf Man. The film initially had an original score composed by Danny Elfman , before it was rejected and Elfman eventually replaced by Australian musician Paul Haslinger .
The Wolfman is a 2010 American gothic horror film directed by Joe Johnston, from a screenplay by Andrew Kevin Walker and David Self. A remake of the 1941 film of the same name , it stars Benicio del Toro (who also produced), Anthony Hopkins , Emily Blunt and Hugo Weaving .
The Wolf Man When his brother dies, Larry Talbot (Lon Chaney Jr.) returns to Wales and reconciles with his father (Claude Rains).While there, he visits an antique shop and, hoping to impress Gwen (Evelyn Ankers), the attractive shopkeeper, buys a silver walking cane.
A wolfman named Larry Talbot appeared in Roger Zelazny's supernatural fantasy novel A Night in the Lonesome October. Talbot is also a recurring character in various short stories authored by Neil Gaiman. The stories chronicle the seemingly immortal Talbot's life as both a werewolf and as an "adjustor", an occupation of loose definition and most ...
Wolf Man is a 2025 American psychological body horror film directed by Leigh Whannell from a screenplay he co-wrote with Corbett Tuck. A reboot of The Wolf Man (1941), the film stars Christopher Abbott, Julia Garner, and Sam Jaeger.
The song "Portrait of a Summer Thief" was written by Danny Elfman [1] and featured on the Spider-Man 3 soundtrack. Their first LP, Cinematica was released on October 14, 2008. A second LP, Where My Communist Heart Meets My Capitalist Mind was released on May 3, 2011.
Bernard Wolfman (1924–2011), American dean of the University of Pennsylvania Law School and law professor Marv Wolfman (born 1946), American comic book writer Sergei Pankejeff (1886–1979), a patient Sigmund Freud gave the pseudonym "Wolf Man" to protect his identity
The Wolfman's theme song was Sly and the Family Stone's "I Want to Take You Higher". The segment featured then-current hit singles by The Rolling Stones , Sly and the Family Stone , Three Dog Night or other Top 40 radio stars of the time (which were referred to as ‘golden oldies’ in order to avoid dating the program), with the Wolfman and ...