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LE
PACTE DES LOUPS (THE BROTHERHOOD OF THE WOLF)
A film review by Mark R. Leeper.
CAPSULE: A strange and fearsome beast is preying on the peasants
of the Gevaudan region of France.
This is an extremely frustrating film that tries very hard to
create a 1760s period feel and then scuttles it with anachronistic
fighting techniques and 20th Century attitudes and values.
Mostly this is just a recombination of familiar elements.
Rating: 6 (0 to 10), +1 (-4 to +4)
For a long time starting in the 1970s popular filmmakers were avoiding
making films set in historical periods.
The
belief was apparently that people were not being taught history
as well in schools and that the big money demographic as far as
film audiences were concerned, that is teenage boys, did not know
much about and hence could not identify with historical periods.
I think someone must have realized that most teenage boys do not
know that much about Middle Earth either and that is not going to
get in the way of LORD OF THE RINGS. So several adventure films
will be coming out soon set in historical periods.
The problem is filmmakers realize that teenage boys still do not
know much about those periods so while the films may use the periods
as exotic settings, the films being set in these earlier times are
not necessarily historically accurate.
A prime example is Christophe Gans's LE PACTE DES LOUPS which does
a terrific job of recreating the look of 1760s France and then adds
martial arts, what looks like wire-enhanced acrobatics, and characters
with 21st century values.
Some twenty-five years before the French Revolution, which would
bring upheaval to all of the country, a beast has come to the rural
Gevaudan region of France.
Over the course of three years it has killed one hundred women
and children. To clear things up Louis XV sends Fronsac, an ex-military
naturalist. With Fronsac comes his faithful American Indian equal
Mani, a great kickboxer and a noble savage who happens to follow
Fronsac around.
From the beginning of his visit Fronsac and Mani are embroiled
in local conflicts. Fronsac has his own ideas about the nature of
this strange creature that has killed so many.
The trailer tries to present the impression this is a film in the
vein of THE CURSE OF THE WEREWOLF. Perhaps that done with this level
of production values could have been a fresh and effective film.
In fact, it is more like a warmed-over Sherlock Holmes story done
with some panache, but not enough to make it worthwhile. Initially
the script generates some wonder at the nature of this strange beast
but the writing soon proves to be a real disappointment.
The hero has 20th century thinking and values in spite of the 18th
century look. The fight scenes do not help much either. The digital
effects and what appears to be wirework do not help.
Fights are unrealistically staged with gangs of attackers conveniently
coming on conveniently one at a time. Director Christophe Gans shares
writing credits with Stephane Cabel. The editing is by David Wu
who also edited THE BRIDE WITH WHITE HAIR, giving the viewer some
idea what to expect from the fight scenes.
The film may be edited down from the 142-minute version playing
at film festivals, which might be a bit long for subject matter.
There is the germ of a good idea here, but in the writing all sorts
of commercial compromises were made to dumb the film down to make
it play better with wider audiences. This is a film that looks a
whole lot better than it sounds.
My advice to American viewers: just enjoy the art design and do
not bother reading the subtitles. I give this film a 6 on the 0
to 10 scale and a +1 on the -4 to +4 scale. One side note: in the
beginning of the film JAWS we see a woman attacked near a buoy.
We do not see what is attacking her but she seems two or three
times to be tugged back and forth like she is getting away and being
pulled back. She is flopped around like a rag doll.
I was never sure what the shark was supposed to be doing that would
create this back-and-forth motion. That scene is imitated on dry
land toward the beginning of this film and that motion makes less
sense on dry land.
In neither film when you see the creature is that movement repeated.
It just does not seem that motion would result from the attack.
Mark R. Leeper
Copyright 2001 Mark R. Leeper
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OTHER CONTENT - December 2001
Brotherhood
of the Wolf
(FILM REVIEWS)
Monster
Monster
(FILM REVIEWS)
The
Women of Star Trek
(CONVENTIONS)
Pottering
About
(FILM REVIEWS)
Mammoth
SF and Farscape Tunes
(NEW BOOKS)
Unexpected?
(TV
REVIEWS)
The
New New Fan
(ARTICLES)
The
Long-Awaited Andorian Incident
(TV REVIEWS)
Dreamers
of Dune & Star Wars Trailers
(WEB SITE REVIEWS)

Angus Day. 01/12/2001
I think the reviewer is reading a little too much into this film.
It's basically just a fun action movie (albeit in another language).
Heck, I enjoyed it.
Rachael. 01/12/2001
Foreign language movies always put me off. You have to see them
twice to get a handle on what's going on.
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