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Brotherhood of the Wolf
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French legend has it that a creature known as the Beast of Gevaudan -- a huge, wolf-like monster -- was responsible for the violent deaths of over 100 persons in the mid-18th century, and this horror fantasy blends the lore of this fabled beast with a story of two men who set out to capture it. After a number of mutilated corpses begin appearing across the French countryside, naturalist Chevalier Gregoire de Fronsac (Samuel Le Bihan) is dispatched by the King to find and capture the animal responsible for the killings. Mani (Mark Dacascos), an Indian from Canada and an experienced hand in the wilds, is hired to assist de Fronsac in his work. Gregoire's assignment earns him the acquaintance of Marianne de Morangias (Emilie Dequenne), the lovely daughter of the idly wealthy Count de Morangias (Jean Yanne), but Gregoire receives a much chillier welcome from her brother Jean-Francois (Vincent Cassel), who, despite having lost an arm to a lion in Africa, is quite the huntsman himself. As Gregoire and Mani arrive in the village of Gevaudan, they're drawn to a local house of prostitution, where the animalistic allure and supernatural powers of Sylvia (Monica Bellucci) prove to have a profound effect on the naive Gregoire. Jim Henson's Creature Shop provided the special-effects expertise for the creation of the Beast of Gevaudan. ~ Mark Deming, All Movie Guide
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jdice31jdice31 Re: Favorite Foreign Scary Movie
by jdice31 in HORROR MOVIES 101
hasn't rated it.
"[quote user="divinemsjunebug"] Brotherhood of the Wolf is a great movie, I didn't think about it because I don't think of it as horror-just a great movie. " [More]
divinemsjunebugdivinemsjunebug Re: Favorite Foreign Scary Movie
by divinemsjunebug in HORROR MOVIES 101
loved it.
"Brotherhood of the Wolf is one of my favorite movies, I just love watching it. I have never seen Junk before and just watched the Trailer for it, it looks so cool, it is going on my Netflix Queue next. You don't see too many Japanese Zombie films, it's usually hauntings. It looks really fun. Audition still gives me the shivers. That was really good, but I can't watch it again...whew. " [More]
divinemsjunebugdivinemsjunebug Re: Favorite Foreign Scary Movie
by divinemsjunebug in HORROR MOVIES 101
loved it.
"I have to say that I loved both Vanishings. Was the original Dutch? I can't remember. Anyway, that was a great psychological thriller and the ending still disturbs me when I think of it. I have to agree with IronAbacus too, I really enjoy Asian horror the best I think. I loved the Ringu movies, the American Ring was really great, but the second one was just horrible in my opionion, but I absolutely loved Ringu 2, it so spooky. I think I love Asian scary movies because it is more supernatural than blood and gore. I love ghost stories and wondering what's around the corner in the dark, or under the table. So cool. Have you seen Two Sisters? That was really good and very sad. I did like the ending though. The Ju-on movies were much scarier to me than the American versions, although I did really enjoy Grudge 2. To be honest, I think I really liked Brotherhood of the Wolf because of the excellent choreography of the fight scenes, the mystery of what the creature w ... " [More]
Review by All Movie Guide
All Movie Guide
is neutral about it.
It may have too many costumes (and minutes of celluloid) for kung-fu fans, and too much action for the period piece crowd, but the French hit Le Pacte des Loups is a stylish visual exercise, full of gristle and vigor, by anyone's standards. In some ways the film Peter Hyams' The Musketeer could have been, in others resembling the gritty swordplay milieu of John McTiernan's The 13th Warrior, Christophe Gans' Brotherhood of the Wolf (as it is known in English) may best be categorized as a child of the post-Matrix era. With freeze-frame action that shifts abruptly in and out of slow motion, and a wandering camera that skims snow-swept hills and rainy forests, it's a restless film that convincingly applies space-age visuals to 18th century France. The plot strays from coherence on more than one occasion, structurally scattershot, but to the credit of screenwriters Gans and Stephane Cabel, most of the loose ends wrap up by the close. The virtuosity of the fisticuffs and swordplay, including some surprise weaponry and booby traps that seem more like big-budgeted Hollywood creations than products of French cinema, should please those looking for some fancy ass-kicking. Where Brotherhood of the Wolf stumbles a bit is in trying to straddle too many genres. It can't blend the standard scares of a monster movie with the quill pens of a costume drama and the roundhouse kicks of a Hong Kong actioner without seeming a little exhausted by the last of the 143 minutes. Still, it's difficult to watch the characters using various weapons to annihilate pumpkins, the pulp splattering hither and non, without cracking a grin at the audacious visual energy of it all. ~ Derek Armstrong, All Movie Guide
 



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