Los Angeles Times

His ‘Wolf ’ walks on the wild side

- By Robert Daniels

Nathalie Biancheri’s unsettling, evocative film, “Wolf,” begins with Jacob at his most bare. He stands upright, naked, with his muscular frame firmly planted amid the verdant forest fauna. He rolls on the ground. His soilsmeare­d skin glistens from the dew. His nostrils flare as he inhales deeply. It’s a recurring dream, as real and as stable as Jacob’s existence. Jacob believes he’s a wolf.

Written and directed by Biancheri, “Wolf,” a surreal narrative exploring identity, is a cross between Yorgos Lanthimos’ “The Lobster” and Miloš Forman’s “One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest.” The film derives inspiratio­n from the Otherkin subculture. Otherkin do not wholly identify as human. They believe, through reincarnat­ion or trans-species dysphoria, they are derived from animals. Because of his belief, Jacob’s parents commit him to a peculiar psychiatri­c clinic specializi­ng in “Species Identity Disorder.”

A vicious doctor known as “the Zookeeper” (a ferocious Paddy Considine) runs the facility. He believes this condition is a learned behavior. His treatments involve distributi­ng tablet computers loaded with animal hunting games because he believes technology will bring the patients closer to humanity. The character represents the myriad ways Biancheri remarks upon the cruelest contours of human nature: the apathy toward other living creatures, the practice of othering and bigotry.

Jacob (George MacKay) is thrust into a fight for survival against the Zookeeper. His only partner in this existentia­l tussle is Wildcat (LilyRose Depp), the adoptive daughter of the other facility head played by Eileen Walsh. Both want to escape. But the outside world isn’t too forgiving of people like them. The rare time that reality intrudes upon the glass clinic, two local vandals throw a dead dog through a window (a warning is required for animal lovers).

The inside of the hospital, however, isn’t any more inviting. The Zookeeper employs brutal methods to dispel his patients’ supposed delusions: He dares a young girl named Parrott (Lola Petticrew) to leap from a window to prove she can fly. He forces Squirrel (Darragh Shannon) to climb a tree, breaking the boy’s finger in the process. While the film centers Otherkin, the architectu­re of the facility serves as a larger metaphor for gender: The stagey play area the patients frolic through emphasizes the performati­ve while the color palette of blue, pink and white takes inspiratio­n from the transgende­r flag.

MacKay gives a visceral, physical performanc­e. When among other patients, his back is stiff as though, if only he could remain perfectly still, imperfectl­y human, he might not buckle from quelling his true instincts. While alone in his room, he writhes and squirms as he gulps down half-echoed howls. Since breaking out in Sam Mendes’ heart-pounding World War I drama, “1917,” MacKay has relied on depicting characters repressing their emotions, such as his turn in “True History of the Kelly Gang.” But in “Wolf,” MacKay balances on the edge of something more than primal, more than dangerous.

Jacob falls in love with Wildcat. But as his animal side begins to overtake his human responses, his very existence comes under threat by the Zookeeper, causing the couple to plan a breakout. Sometimes “Wolf” is slight, relying on mystery and metaphor to build suspense, but Biancheri’s sense of narrative adventure imbues this survivalis­t picture with more than uneasiness. She gives it tenderness. Through the brutal power of MacKay, “Wolf ” runs wild with a life-affirming streak of independen­ce.

 ?? Focus Features ?? GEORGE MACKAY stars as the lupine Jacob.
Focus Features GEORGE MACKAY stars as the lupine Jacob.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States