Naomi Watts has always been willing to go all-in for a role, and her performance is riveting as June, who is practically vibrating with anxiety and covered in sweat for the whole film
Naomi Watts delivers a bravura performance; "The Wolf Hour" is a slow burning nightmare that brilliantly blurs the lines between the real and the imagined
Alistair Banks Griffin's screenplay seems unfocused and uncertain. It's a film that demands a good deal of patience and flirts with spells of outright boredom
"The Wolf Hour" is a peculiar film, compelling in its way due to Naomi Watts' tensile, committed performance; But, "The Wolf Hour" leaving Watts, on eminently watchable form, to grind her teeth on a role far less meaty than it ought to have been
"The Wolf Hour" is a much grimier, sweatier film than any of Hitchcock's more fastidious horror. It's a tense movie, quiet and menacing, but it's also one about redemption