Aaron Taylor-Johnson reunites with Robert Eggers for Werwulf after starring in Nosferatu, with the medieval werewolf horror film arriving December 2026.
Aaron Taylor-Johnson Eggers collaboration continues with Werwulf, and honestly, this pairing makes too much sense. After playing Friedrich Harding in Eggers’ 2024 Gothic horror hit Nosferatu—a wealthy shipbuilder and vampire skeptic who meets exactly the fate you’d expect—Taylor-Johnson is reteaming with the director for what Eggers calls “the darkest thing I’ve ever written, by far.”
Werwulf is set in the medieval era and centers on werewolf horror, which is really all the plot detail we have right now. Eggers is co-writing with Sjón, his The Northman collaborator, and the cast includes Lily-Rose Depp and Willem Dafoe, both of whom also survived Nosferatu. Aaron Taylor-Johnson Eggers reunion represents a growing trend of the director building a repertory company of actors willing to endure his historically accurate, psychologically punishing productions.

What makes this particularly notable is how quickly the collaboration solidified. Nosferatu premiered in December 2024, became Eggers’ highest-grossing film at $182 million worldwide, and earned four Oscar nominations. By July 2025, Aaron Taylor-Johnson Eggers Werwulf casting was already announced. When a director and actor click this fast, it usually means they’re speaking the same creative language—one that involves period-accurate suffering and lots of practical effects.
Aaron Taylor-Johnson Eggers Creative Partnership
Aaron Taylor-Johnson Eggers working relationship seems built on mutual respect for intensity. In Nosferatu, Taylor-Johnson’s Harding was a skeptic who refused to believe in the supernatural until it literally drained the life from his world. The performance required a specific kind of rigid masculinity that slowly cracks under pressure—something Taylor-Johnson has proven adept at across his career, from Kick-Ass to Nocturnal Animals.

Werwulf will arrive December 25, 2026, because nothing says Christmas like medieval lycanthropy. Eggers has also teased a Labyrinth sequel and an A Christmas Carol adaptation in development, but Werwulf appears to be his immediate priority. The director’s commitment to historical authenticity suggests this won’t be your typical CGI werewolf transformation. Expect practical makeup, period-accurate violence, and probably some deeply unsettling folklore that makes you afraid of the woods for weeks.
For Taylor-Johnson, this continues a fascinating career trajectory. He’s jumped from superhero films to indie darlings to prestige horror without ever fully committing to one lane. Aaron Taylor-Johnson Eggers partnership gives him the kind of challenging material that serious actors crave, wrapped in the commercial viability of a studio horror film. It’s the best of both worlds, assuming you’re okay with spending months in uncomfortable costumes pretending to be terrified.
December 25, 2026. Bring a silver bullet.
See Aaron Taylor-Johnson Eggers Werwulf in theaters December 25, 2026.
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