Werewolf: By Night

At its core, is a deep meditation on the "monster within" [25]. Like Larry Talbot in the classic The Wolf Man , Jack Russell grapples with fate and the moral dilemma of how society treats those deemed "deviant" or "frightening" [3, 25]. However, where traditional tales often end in tragedy, Russell’s story in the Marvel Universe suggests a third path: integration.

The creation of was born from a pivotal moment in comic history: the 1971 loosening of the Comics Code Authority, which previously restricted "monstrous" archetypes like vampires and werewolves. Marvel responded with a horror boom, but Jack Russell was distinct. Unlike the purely malevolent lycanthropes of folklore, Russell was a "howling, hirsute hero" [15], a man cursed by a family bloodline rather than a random bite [7, 15]. Werewolf By Night

Gael García Bernal’s portrayal of Jack Russell subverts the "bloodthirsty wolf" trope [11]. Instead of a hunter, he is a protector of fellow "monsters," such as the swamp creature Ted (Man-Thing). At its core, is a deep meditation on

He does not seek to destroy the beast; he seeks to co-exist with it. In a world of gods and aliens, the Werewolf remains one of the most human characters because his struggle—the fight to maintain one's humanity in the face of overwhelming instinct—is the most relatable of all. The creation of was born from a pivotal