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Original title: Le Pacte des loups Directed by Christophe Gans Written by Stéphane Cabel, Christophe Gans Cast Samuel Le Bihan, Vincent Cassel, Émilie Dequenne, Monica Bellucci, Jérémie Renier [more] Release Date • USA: Oct 11, 2001 • UK: 19 Oct 2001 DVD Release Date • R1: Oct 1, 2002 • R2: 23 Sep 2002
Budget FRF 200,000,000
Official Website:
Brotherhood of the Wolf Website
MPAA Rating Rated R for strong violence and gore, and sexuality/nudity.
Running Time 2 hours, 22 minutes
Country France, Canada
Production Companies David Films, Davis-Films, Eskwad, Le Studio Canal+, Natexis Banques Populaires Images, Studio Image Soficas, TF1 Films Productions
Studio Canal Plus, Davis Films, Natexis Banques Populaires Images, Studio Image Soficas, TF1 Films
More info on IMDb.com
Other Titles • Brotherhood of the Wolf • Le Pacte des loups (2001) • Der Pakt der Wölfe (2001)
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Review of Brotherhood of the Wolf (2001) by Susan GrangerSusan Granger's review of "BROTHERHOOD OF THE WOLF" (Universal Focus)
This epic French fantasy-thriller combines the monster movie with
martial-arts action as a Gallic legend comes to life on the screen. On the eve
of the French Revolution, it seems a giant wolf-like creature was savagely
terrorizing peasants, primarily women and children, in the rural southern region
of Gevaudan - and the ensuing uproar was embarrassing to the 18th-century
monarch, Louis XV. So he sent a renowned philosopher/naturalist, Gregoire de
Fronsac (hunky Samuel Le Bihan), with his stoic Canadian-Iroquois blood brother
(Hawaiian-born athlete Mark Dacascos) to the fog-shrouded countryside (that
resembles "Sleepy Hollow") to bring the rampaging beast down. Plus there's a
right-wing religious conspiracy, a kinky courtesan/spy (Monica Belluci), and a
sneering villain (Vincent Cassel) who lusts for his winsome sister (Emilie
Dequenne) who falls for Fronsac. Writer/director Christophe Gans and co-writer
Stepane Cabel's daring concept of updating historical drama, laced with
superstition, has clearly been influenced by the canards and clichés of Hong
Kong's Samurai movies, Sergio Leone's reworking of the Western genre, Hollywood
costume dramas and werewolf stories, and the results - with credit to Dan
Laustsen's cinematography and Jim Henson's Creature Shop - are staggeringly
violent and overblown, particularly the evisceration sequences. And any
resemblance to the "Beast of Gevaudan" folklore turns out to be purely
coincidental. In French with English subtitles, on the Granger Movie Gauge of 1
to 10, "Brotherhood of the Wolf" is a visually stylish, supernatural 6 with its
gory, grisly bite aimed particularly at a young adult audience. "Brotherhood"
was such an enormous hit in France that it's skipping the art-house route to
prowl our mainstream multiplexes.
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X-RT-RatingText: 6/10
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