Brotherhood of the Wolf | |
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![]() United States poster |
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Directed by | Christophe Gans |
Produced by | Richard Grandpierre Samuel Hadida |
Written by | Christophe Gans Stéphane Cabel |
Starring | Samuel Le Bihan Vincent Cassel Émilie Dequenne Monica Bellucci Jérémie Renier Mark Dacascos |
Music by | Joseph LoDuca |
Cinematography | Dan Laustsen |
Editing by | David Wu Sébastien Prangère Xavier Loutreuil |
Distributed by | Universal Pictures (US) (theatrical) Focus Features (US) (director's cut DVD) TVA Films(Canada) Metropolitan Filmexport (France) United International Pictures (Australia) StudioCanal (international sales) |
Release date(s) | France: 31 January 2001 Canada: 1 June 2001 United States: 11 January 2002 |
Running time | 142 minutes 151 minutes (director's cut) |
Country | France |
Language | French |
Budget | $29,000,000 |
Gross revenue | $70,752,904 (worldwide)[1] |
Brotherhood of the Wolf is a 2001 French film directed by Christophe Gans, starring Samuel Le Bihan, Vincent Cassel, Monica Bellucci, Émilie Dequenne and Mark Dacascos, and written by Gans and Stéphane Cabel. Its original French title is Le Pacte des loups, which literally means "the pact of the wolves."
The film is loosely based on the book L'Innocence des loups ("The Innocence of the Wolves"), by the French zoologist Michel Louis, a study about a real-life series of killings that took place in France in the 18th century and the famous legend around the Beast of Gévaudan. Parts of the film were shot at Château de Roquetaillade. Being a historical drama film, it has anachronistic martial arts fight sequences; it also contains elements of erotica, mystery, horror, politics, romance, and fantasy.
This $29 million-budgeted film was an international box office success, grossing over $70 million in worldwide theatrical release.[2] In the United States of America, the film also enjoyed commercial success; Universal Pictures paid $2 million to acquire the film's United States distribution rights[3] and this film went on grossing $11,260,096 in limited theatrical release in the United States, making it the second-highest-grossing French-language film in the United States in the last two decades (this film also did brisk video and DVD sales in the United States).[4]
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The film begins during the French Revolution with the aged Marquis d'Apcher (Jacques Perrin) as the narrator, writing his memoirs in a castle, while the voices of a mob can be heard from outside. The film flashes back to the mid 1760s when a mysterious beast terrorized the province of Gévaudan and nearby lands.
Grégoire de Fronsac (Samuel Le Bihan), a knight and the royal taxidermist of King Louis XV of France, and his Iroquois companion Mani (Dacascos), an Iroquoi, arrive in Gévaudan to capture the beast. Upon arrival, they rescue an aged healer and his daughter from an attack by soldiers. The young and enlightened Thomas, Marquis d'Apcher (Jérémie Renier), befriends them and assists their investigation.
During the course of the film, Fronsac romances Marianne de Morangias (Émilie Dequenne), the daughter of a local count, whose brother, Jean-François (Cassel), was also an avid hunter and a world traveler, before losing one arm to a lion in Africa. Fronsac is also intrigued by Sylvia (Bellucci), an Italian courtesan at the local brothel.
Fronsac is initially skeptical about the beast's existence, since survivors describe it as much larger than any wolf he has ever seen. Through various interactions and attacks, Fronsac discovers a truth that leads him to the beast itself and the secret society that created it.
In the United States, Focus Features released a two-disc director's cut DVD of Brotherhood of the Wolf on 26 August 2008. Beside having a longer cut of the film, the DVD also has several extra features: deleted scenes, theatrical trailer, two behind the scenes documentaries (The Guts of the Beast and Documentary), Legend documentary (a documentary that reveals the historical facts about the Beast of Gévaudan), and Storyboards gallery.[5][6]
Brotherhood of The Wolf garnered mostly positive reviews, with a 72% "Fresh" rating on Rotten Tomatoes, based on 113 reviews.[7] Roger Ebert of the Chicago Sun-Times wrote that this film is "entertaining".[8] Michael Atkinson of Village Voice wrote "It's easily the most disarming and inventive movie made for genre geeks in years."[9] Harry Knowles of Ain't It Cool News wrote that this film is "exciting, alluring and thrilling".[10]
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