Grackus (BAFTA winner Stuart Brennan) has been injured from their first encounter with the beasts and is starting to behave strangely. The leader of the Romans admits to knowing there was a sickness that plagued the Pict lands and that the missing men, may well be the very beasts hunting them. But can the hunted become the hunters, or will snow and fatigue plague their journey home? With their lives in danger the Romans must either face the beast or turn and run. As winter threatens and no sign of the men, the group prepare to turn home, when they encounter a beast that is hunting them. Hadrian’s Wall is the last outpost of the Roman frontier and a small group of male and female soldiers have left the safety of it to travel North, into Pict territory, searching for four missing men. Update – Another plot synopsis reads as follows: Stay tuned with us for more details about the movie Wolf. The film has yet to get an official release date. I think Romans and werewolves will make for a great movie! Led by their Captain, Domitius, (George McCluskey), and two of their strongest warriors, Grackus, (Stuart Brennan) and Nerva, (Mark Paul Wake), the legion soon realize that what lays in wait for them is something much worse than any plague or army known to man – And with them being picked off one by one on their journey back to the wall by a beast none of them can match, and survival being their only hope, will there be anyone left to warn Rome of the dangers it may now face. When four messengers sent by Rome to a plague infected Caledonia, with a message of peace and help for their King, go missing Rome has no choice but to send ten of their finest across Hadrian’s Wall to find and bring them back. Although the interpretation of the meaning is yet to be found by the viewer himself.We just spotted the first official trailer of Wolf, the upcoming horror movie directed by Stuart Brennan based on a script he co-wrote with George McCluskey and starring Stuart Brennan, Mark Paul Wake, George McCluskey, Victoria Morrison, Adanna Oji, Austin Caley, Jennifer Chippindale, Ross Anderson, Nick Sheard, Sarah Zebrzuski, Sarina Taylor, Cole Leman, Connor McKinley, Phil Littlefair, Mark Kitto, Amy Whitrod Brown, Lucinda Davidson, Bethan Leyshon, and Max Digby Carpenter: The perfect mixture of tradition and modernity. Yoyogi Park and the new Olympic Stadium are shown as part of the skyline, in which the messenger of a bygone time is set-in. After the credits have rolled up, we see a Samurai on top of a skyscraper in modern Tokyo. It may be difficult to follow the true intention of the movie without knowing the director's vita and his meddling with the police.Īs in “Blue Spring”, Toshiaki Toyoda presents an iconic scene on a rooftop. “Wolf's Calling” is all about tension and anticipation and leaves the viewer wanting more. The atmospheric cinematography focuses on the Wolf symbolic, which can be seen on posters, in shrines, and many other sequences. Even to the point where its over-stylization points to a parodistic use of sound. Through a condensed soundtrack, the music functions as the most important instrument of the narration. Since it is a self-financed project, “Wolf's Calling” might be a hint to a future Japanese film industry outside the production system of the big studios.Ī pure concept of sound and sight creates a movie with hardly any dialogue, but with a highly anti-climatic build-up. Kiyohiko Shibukawa (“9 Souls” 2003) and Ryuhei Matsuda are accompanied by international known actor Tadanobu Asano (“Ichi the Killer” 2001) in a supporting role. Produced outside the committee system and with his own money, “Wolf's Calling” stars a familiar cast for a Toyoda movie.
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