Screened as part of NZIFF 2015

The Wolfpack 2015

Directed by Crystal Moselle Framing Reality

In this stranger-than-fiction doco, we meet six brothers who have spent their entire lives locked by their father into their Manhattan apartment – where they watch movies obsessively and film their own ingenious re-enactments.

Aug 12

Hoyts Northlands 4

Aug 14

Hoyts Northlands 4

Aug 15

Hoyts Northlands 5

Aug 16

Hoyts Northlands 5

Hoyts Northlands 4

Aug 19

Hoyts Northlands 4

USA In English
84 minutes DCP

Director, Photography

Producers

Izabella Tzenkova
,
Crystal Moselle
,
Hunter Gray
,
Alex Orlovsky

Editor

Enat Sidi

Music

Dany Bensi
,
Saunder Juriaans

With

Bhagavan Angulo
,
Govinda Angulo
,
Narayana Angulo
,
Mukunda Angulo
,
Krisna Angulo
,
Jagadesh Angulo
,
Visnu Angulo
,
Susanne Angulo
,
Oscar Angulo

Festivals

Sundance
,
Tribeca
,
San Francisco 2015

Awards

Grand Jury Prize (US Documentary), Sundance Film Festival 2015

Elsewhere

The winner of the Documentary Grand Jury Prize at Sundance this year, Crystal Moselle’s film delves into the bizarrely sheltered lives of six brothers whose father has confined them (and their sister) since birth to the tiny rooms of their Lower East Side apartment. What these boys know about social interaction they’ve learned from watching movies – thousands of them – and filming ingenious, homemade re-creations of their favourites. (Reservoir Dogs looms large: it offers each of them a major role.) Moselle draws on a vast video archive of their housebound lives to delight and disturb us in equal measure, but her portrait is a gently hopeful one, capturing them at a moment when the tyrannical grip of their father is faltering and they are making tentative forays into the world outside.

The Wolfpack indeed has much to say about fandom, the reciprocal bonds between consumption and production, the nightmarish consequences of unchecked patriarchy, and, especially, the pathological evils of insularity (it may be one of the greatest films ever made on this theme).” — Blake Williams, Cinema Scope