Christopher Abbott in “Wolf Man”.Photo:Nicola Dove/Universal Pictures

Christopher Abbott as Blake in Wolf Man, directed by Leigh Whannell

Nicola Dove/Universal Pictures

ForChristopher Abbott, chewing on his prosthetic limbs inWolf Manwasn’t all that bad.

The actor, 38, transforms into theiconic movie monster in the new rebootalso starringJulia Garnerand newcomer Matilda Firth. Taking on the title role meant hours in the makeup chair for Abbott, who also has to take a bite out of his bloody arm and leg for different scenes.

“There’s a lot of sugar in that blood stuff,” Abbott explained in an interview withMama’s Geeky. “There’s one scene … where I’m gnawing on my leg. It was gross but it was kinda delicious. Like, the blood is sugar, and I think — I swear to God, I think the bone part was, like, white chocolate or something like that. Something with white chocolate on it.”

“I mean, it’s not like I want it, but it wasn’t horrible,” the star added.

Abbott said he “laughed immediately” when he saw himself in the full werewolf makeup for the first time. “It’s scary and all that stuff, but it’s so ridiculous.”

Christopher Abbott in “Wolf Man”.Nicola Dove/Universal Pictures

Christopher Abbott as Blake in Wolf Man, directed by Leigh Whannell.

Preparing for the animalistic role, “Research-wise, it’s the first time I’ve had to research moreNational Geographic–type stuff than other movies,” Abbott toldComicBook.com. “There’s different levels as the process is happening. There’s maybe 80 percent human, 20 percent animal, and then that shifts.”

“So to track how a human would react to something as opposed to an animal; a human reacts one way, if it feels ill or if it’s scared, as opposed to how does an animal act, how, if it feels ill, all its little levels,” he explained.

Julia Garner, Matilda Firth and Christopher Abbott in “Wolf Man”.Nicola Dove/Universal Pictures

from left) Charlotte (Julia Garner), Ginger (Matilda Firth) and Blake (Christopher Abbott) in Wolf Man, directed by Leigh Whannell.

Wolf Manis from writer-director Leigh Whannell (2020’sThe Invisible Man). Abbott plays Blake, a San Francisco man who inherits a rural Oregon farmhouse after his dad vanishes.

“With his marriage to his high-powered wife Charlotte (Garner), fraying, Blake persuades Charlotte to take a break from the city and visit the property with their young daughter Ginger (Firth),” teases a synopsis.

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Garner, 30, toldScreenRantthat the first time she saw Abbott in the “incredible” prosthetics “I could not stop looking at him. It was very weird and bizarre. And I was just like, ‘Oh my God, this is terrifying.’ And then I got used to it after like, three days.”

She added, “I think, actually, it’s more scary when it is a slower transition, because I still recognized little elements of Chris. His skin and his hair were changing, but he still had his eyes. And I think if you want to make anything scarier, just go with something familiar.”

Wolf Manis in theaters now.

source: people.com