Seems like!
I will say, my preference with this stuff is (and likely will always be) for lavish, period set horror (which is probably why I'm a bit softer on Joe Johnston's
The Wolfman and
The Last Voyage of the Demeter than I probably should be, desipte their shortcomings, and I absolutely adore Francis Ford Coppola's
Bram Stoker's Dracula [though that one isn't Universal]). But putting that personal preference aside, Whannell's
Invisible Man was very good, so I'm quite curious and excited to see how he does tackles this one even with a modern setting.
Plus, as far as big period Gothic horror goes, I always have Guillermo del Toro's
Frankenstein and Robert Eggers'
Nosferatu on the horizon.