Eagerly anticipating this week ... (6-24)

Eagerly anticipating this week ... (6-24)
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11/28/2022

Brotherhood of the Wolf/Le Pacte des Loups (2001) - Impressive elements in ludicrous French period monster actioner

 

Some very curious, face-covering coats on this poster for Christophe Gans' Brotherhood of the Wolf may provoke involuntary smiles and laughs

In 18th century France a nobleman and a native American are sent by the king to a bleak countryside to investigate the mysterious killings of hundreds by a beast there...

 

Brotherhood of the Wolf is written by Stéphane Cabel (Le Concile de Pierre (2006)) and co-writer/director Christophe Gans (Crying Freeman (1995)). It is loosely based on a series of actual 18th century killings and the legend of the beast of Gévaudan. The original French title translates to 'the pact of the wolves'.

Monica Bellucci (Under Suspicion (2000)) looks enticing in black, and adds quality on her own here, and the film also has a good-looking monster and generally handsome production values. The rest is a round of very pompous nonsense and to me, more detrimentally, a hugely dull waste of resources. 

Brotherhood of the Wolf vacillates between historical melodrama and state-of-the-art, fast-edited action scenes. It is an overlong mess.

 

Related post:

 

Christophe GansSilent Hill (2006) - Gans' senseless, unfrightening adaptation




 

Watch a trailer for the film here

 

Cost: 29 mil. $

Box office: 70.7 mil. $

= Minor flop (returned 2.43 times its cost)

[Brotherhood of the Wolf was released 31 January (Switzerland, France) and runs 142 minutes. Shooting took place in France around March 2000. The film opened #28 to a 100k $ first weekend in 37 theaters in North America, where it peaked at #16 and in 404 theaters (different weeks), grossing 11.2 mil. $ (15.8 % of the total gross), becoming the 6th highest-grossing French film there ever at the time. The marketing disguised the fact that it was not an English language film in order to attract bigger (young) crowds - with success. The film's biggest market was France with 24 mil. $ (33.9 %). It was also #1 for 2 weeks in Italy. The film won 1/4 César award nominations, among other honors. Roger Ebert gave it a 3/4 star review, translating to 2 notches over this one. Gans returned with Silent Hill (2006). Samuel Le Bihan (La Place d'un Autre (1993)) returned in La Niut de Noces (2001, short), Pourquoi t'as Fait ça? (2001, short) and theatrically in He Loves Me, He Loves Me Not/À la Folie... Pas du Tout (2002); Mark Dacascos (Sanctuary (1998)) in Instinct to Kill (2001); and Bellucci in Asterix & Obelix: Mission Cleopatra/Astérix & Obélix: Mission Cléopâtre (2002). Brotherhood of the Wolf is fresh at 73 % with a 6.30/10 critical average at Rotten Tomatoes.]


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