Brotherhood of the Wolf (2001/2002)
Reviewed by Eugene Novikov
http://www.ultimate-movie.com/
Starring Samuel Le Bihan, Vincent Cassel, Emilie
Dequenne, Monica Bellucci, Jérémie Rénier, Mark
Dacascos, Jean Yanne, Jean-François Stévenin, Jacques
Perrin. Directed by Christophe Gans. Rated R.
Once in a while, Hollywood adapts movies from comic
books, usually superhero flicks that wind up eliciting
disdain from fans of the source material. Brotherhood
of the Wolf is the kind of movie that could inspire a
comic book. Actually, that might not be a bad idea; in
frames and on paper, this long, unwieldy mess has a
chance of being more coherent than it is in movie
form. Director Christophe Gans here joins Oliver Stone
in the quest to make the most boring movie with the
most camera tricks humanly possible, and though it
looks good, at least up until the Monster shows up,
it's unwatchable.
The film purports to tell the story of the beast that
terrorized the French region of Gevaudan in the
mid-18th century. It begins with the arrival of
Gregoire de Fransac (Samuel Le Bihan), a biologist,
and his faithful Native American friend/personal
martial artist Mani, into the region as an envoy from
the crown. Their plan is to debunk the supernatural
rumors flying around the countryside and capture the
animal. Of course, the local officials think that they
have everything figured out, and think that the
high-and-mighty newcomers are merely interfering.
Of course, everyone is in for more than he bargained
for, as the two travelers uncover a web of historical
intrigue stretching from the French monarchy to the
Catholic church. When we finally see the Beast and
learn of its nature, however, it is a gigantic
letdown, one of the lamest CGI creatures to ever mar
the screen. It just looks goofy, and not at all
menacing; considering how technically proficient (if
nothing else) the rest of the film is, the shoddy
appearance of its central figure is an unpleasant
surprise.
To conceive how Brotherhood of the Wolf plays, imagine
a very French version of Run Lola Run. It has the same
editorial pyrotechnics as the popular hyperactive
German thriller, but it is also almost twice as long
and filled with nonsensical plot complications that I
didn't care to understand. It's violent, often
gruesome, but not much fun, as every action scene has
a ponderous pseudo-gravity; it's too silly to be taken
seriously, and it plays all the material 100% straight
as a joke on the audience.
Mani is played by Mark Dacascos, an aging American
B-movie martial artist from movies like Only the
Strong and Kickboxer 5. He is fun to watch in the
beginning, when the fight scenes aren't outshadowed by
whatever "plot" the film claims to have. The climax,
though, focuses more on Fransac, who winds up going
nuts and doing the Tarzan thing in front of a
dumbfounded audience of unassuming moviegoers. It all
makes less and less sense as it goes along.
Brotherhood of the Wolf was, apparently, a major
box-office sensation in French. I suppose the French
aren't used to seeing this sort of movie out of their
own country; this isn't exactly the kind of thing
French cinema is notorious for. I'm not sure who would
like it. There are some neat visual tricks, but I
tired of them after about twenty minutes, which was
also about the time the worthy martial-arts scenes
magically disappeared in favor of mythical
mumbo-jumbo. Do not be fooled by the advertising. This
isn't the epic adventure it thinks it is.
Grade: D+
Up Next: The Mothman Prophecies
©2002 Eugene Novikov
==========
X-RAMR-ID: 31309
X-Language: en
X-RT-ReviewID: 294623
X-RT-TitleID: 1111814
X-RT-SourceID: 610
X-RT-AuthorID: 1577
X-RT-RatingText: D+
NOTE: This review was posted on the usenet
to the rec.arts.movies.reviews newsgroup.
Mooviees.com accepts no responsibility for the contents of the review.
Unless stated otherwise, the copyright belongs to the author.