Summary

  • Leigh Whannell reimagines classic monster movies with a focus on emotional and psychological horror.
  • Whannell's talent could bring back many monsters in more subdued and suspense-driven ways, including Tarantula and The Blob.
  • Whannell's unique style could breathe new life into other Universal Monsters like The Creature From The Black Lagoon and Dracula.

Though he began as a writer, Leigh Whannell has risen through the ranks as a horror director over the years with films such as his takes on The Invisible Man and Wolf Man. His style is different from what fans of Universal Monsters expected, but he is regarded as someone who understands modern horror.

As a result of his fame and talent, some fans are curious as to what Leigh Whannell will do next after Wolf Man. If he continues to bring back monster movies of the past, there are many to choose from, both in and outside the lexicon of Universal Monsters, with some practically begging for a chance to be rebooted in the modern age.

8 Pumpkinhead

A Legacy Sequel Could Erase The Poor Sequels

Pumpkinhead
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  • Cast Placeholder Image
    Lance Henriksen
  • Cast Placeholder Image
    Jeff East
  • Cast Placeholder Image
    John D'Aquino
  • Cast Placeholder Image
    Cynthia Bain
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Release Date
June 9, 1988
Runtime
86 minutes
Director
Stan Winston
Writers
Stan Winston, Mark Patrick Carducci, Gary Gerani, Richard Weinman
Sequel(s)
Pumpkinhead 2: Blood Wings, Pumpkinhead: Ashes to Ashes, Pumpkinhead: Blood Feud
Budget
$3.5 Million
Studio(s)
De Laurentiis Entertainment Group
Distributor(s)
United Artists, Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer

Pumpkinhead was directed by special effects legend Stan Winston and became a cult gem of a monster movie. Leigh Whannell’s horror movies focus on the emotional side of characters and that is what Pumpkinhead is centered around, with the titular creature rising to kill those who wronged a man by accidentally causing his son’s death.

The concept of Pumpkinhead is malleable enough that it doesn’t need to be a direct retelling of the same story, but potentially a better sequel than what came before. Leigh Whannell could create a new person to agree to the supernatural deal that causes the demonic entity to rise and start slaughtering people. It could be like Nia DaCosta’s Candyman, a reboot and a sequel to the original film.

7 The Blob

Imagine An Isolation Thriller With Carnivorous Good

The Blob
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Horror
Sci-Fi
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    Steve McQueen
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    Aneta Corsaut
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    Earl Rowe
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    Olin Howland
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Release Date
September 10, 1958
Runtime
86 Minutes
Director
Irvine S. Yeaworth Jr., Russell S. Doughten Jr.
Div
Writers
Theodore Simonson, Kay Linaker, Irvine H. Millgate
Main Genre
Horror

The 1988 movie about a gelatinous organism consuming anything living in its path, gradually getting bigger and bigger was already a remake of a 1950s film. A reboot of The Blob by Leigh Whannell has the chance to do something different with the idea, from showing the story from the monster’s point of view to swapping to a more secluded setting.

T he Blob could be shown slowly taking over a house or a facility with a smaller cast of characters trying to avoid the Blob as it creeps and leaps. Claustrophobia would play a large factor, similar to the horror seen with the Xenomorph in the Alien franchise. It’s also worth mentioning that the gore and body horror aspect would still be prevalent given what Leigh Whannell did with Saw and Wolf Man.

6 The Hunchback Of Notre Dame

The Original Universal Monster Deserves A Comeback

The Hunchback of Notre Dame
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    Lon Chaney
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    Patsy Ruth Miller
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    Norman Kerry
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    Kate Lester
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Release Date
September 6, 1923
Runtime
113 Minutes
Director
Wallace Worsley
Writers
Victor Hugo, Perley Poore Sheehan, Edward T. Lowe Jr., Chester L. Roberts
Producers
Carl Laemmle
Main Genre
Drama

Since Leigh Whannel rebooted the Wolf Man that Lon Chaney Jr. Originally portrayed, he could also adapt the first Universal Monster movie starring Lon Chaney Sr. To the modern day: The Hunchback Of Notre Dame. Quasimodo is a tragic character who wants to love a woman but is treated like a monster for simply being born differently from others.

10 Most Iconic Horror Movie Actors christopher lee, Robert Englund, Jeffery Combs
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Victor Hugo’s The Hunchback Of Notre Dame suits Leigh Whannell’s past with the Saw franchise, focusing on a villain who lashes out against society. However, where Jigsaw is a more heartless killer, the Hunchback is, at its roots, a tragedy and that could be used to craft a character that audiences both hate and love.

5 Tarantula

A Movie That Would Be Every Arachnophobe's Worst Nightmare

  • Release Date: November 23, 1955
  • Director: Jack Arnold
  • Writers: Jack Arnold, Robert M. Fresco
  • Starring: John Agar, Mara Corday, Leo G. Carroll
  • Production Company: Universal Pictures
  • Distributed By: Universal-International

Tension and suspense can go a long way in crafting a horror movie, even when the concept is bizarre and outlandish on paper. For example, Tarantula, a giant spider going on a rampage thanks to radiation sounds like something out of a comic book, but Universal Pictures delivered a movie that terrified audiences thanks to the slow build-up to when the monster attacks.

With modern technology, Tarantula has the potential to make a giant furry spider horrifying. With Leigh Whannell, he could deliver sequences of the tarantula stalking the protagonists from the darkness, creating more suspense in the same vein as Jaws. As a result, any viewer with arachnophobia might be encouraged to stay home.

4 The Invisible Woman

The First Movie Left The Door Wide Open For A Sequel

Not every good horror movie needs a sequel, but Leigh Whannell’s The Invisible Man ended with the protagonist, Cecelia, becoming The Invisible Woman to murder the titular villain, Adrian Griffin. That opens up the possibilities of her trauma, with Griffin being the beginning of a cycle, with her becoming so obsessed with being free that she becomes just as much of a killer as he was.

The Invisible Woman was one of the lesser-known sequels to The Invisible Man back in the 1930s. If Leigh Whannell can deliver on three Saw movies, multiple Insidious movies, and more than one Universal monster, nothing is stopping him from a sequel to The Invisible Man. It can still be a slower burn like the first, with more of a perspective on an invisible killer this time.

3 Dracula

Leigh Whannell Could Make A Unique Vampire Movie

Dracula
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    Bela Lugosi
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    Helen Chandler
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    David Manners
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    Dwight Frye
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Release Date
February 14, 1931
Runtime
74 minutes
Director
Tod Browning
Writers
Frederick Stephani, Garrett Fort, Louis Bromfield, Louis Stevens, Tod Browning, Bram Stoker
Main Genre
Horror
Budget
$355,000
Studio(s)
Universal Pictures
IMDb ID
tt0021814
TMDB User Rating
7.16

Arguably the most overused Universal Monster is Dracula, but that is a testament to how strong of a property Bram Stoker created and the film legacy that more or less started with Bela Lugosi. Vampires in general have seen a resurgence with movies such as Renfield, Abigail, Nosferatu, and The Last Voyage Of The Demeter, which also happen to be adaptations of Dracula.

Split image of Interview With The Vampire, Blade 2, and Dracula Untold
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Leigh Whannell has started a trend of Universal Monsters being adapted more realistically. Considering how many times Dracula has been rebooted and in various styles, a grounded angle focusing on a more beast-like vampire would be another way to keep the story fresh.

2 The Creature From The Black Lagoon

The Gillman Does Not Get Enough Love From Universal

Creature from the Black Lagoon
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Horror
Sci-Fi
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  • Cast Placeholder Image
    Julie Adams
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    Richard Denning
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Release Date
February 12, 1954
Runtime
79minutes
Director
Jack Arnold
Writers
Harry Essex
Budget
$500,000
Studio(s)
Universal Pictures
Distributor(s)
Universal Pictures

Of all the various Universal Monster movies, The Creature From The Black Lagoon has strangely been one of the very few to never get a remake or reboot. Yet, the Gillman remains an iconic monster with his face on posters, merchandise, and nearly everything involving the Universal Monsters franchise.

Considering how much special effects have advanced, a modern retelling of The Creature From The Black Lagoon could maintain what made the original so terrifying while adding more brutality and gore to the monster’s rampage. Movies such as Hellboy and The Shape Of Water prove that the concept can be done and done well.

1 Dr. Jekyll And Mr. Hyde

The Duality Of Jekyll And Hyde Best Matches Whannell's Style

Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde
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    Fredric March
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    Miriam Hopkins
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    Rose Hobart
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    Holmes Herbert
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Release Date
December 24, 1931
Runtime
98 minutes
Director
Rouben Mamoulian
Writers
Percy Heath
Producers
Adolph Zukor

Leigh Whannell’s take on Universal Monsters focuses on the emotional and psychological horror of the concept. There is no better monster suited for that style of storytelling than the enigmatic Dr. Jekyll And Mr. Hyde, mixing the horrors of Dr. Jekyll struggles to keep control of his body while his darker persona, Edward Hyde, becomes a twisted serial killer.

The concept of Jekyll and Hyde can be used in various ways. If Leigh Whannell wants to show off an actor’s talents by having them portray two personalities, focusing on a form of dissociative identity disorder akin to Split, that is viable. However, Whannell could also effectively portray a psychological and physical transformation like the original Universal movie with special effects as he did with Wolf Man.

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Wolf Man
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Release Date
January 15, 2025
Runtime
103 minutes
Director
Leigh Whannell
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Cast
Christopher Abbott, Julia Garner, Matilda Firth, Sam Jaeger, Ben Prendergast, Benedict Hardie, Beatriz Romilly, Milo Cawthorne
Writers
Leigh Whannell, Rebecca Angelo
Producers
Beatriz Sequeira, Jason Blum, Ryan Gosling, Ken Kao
Main Genre
Horror
Studio(s)
Blumhouse Productions