Reviewer's Rating 3 out of 5   User Rating 3 out of 5
Time Of The Wolf (Le Temps Du Loup) (2003)
15Contains strong language and animal slaughter

Given that a sense of catastrophe has pervaded so many of Michael Haneke's films, it's perhaps apt that the Austrian auteur should turn to the aftermath of an unspecified tragedy in Time Of The Wolf.

The film's title is drawn apparently from an ancient Germanic poem, describing the time before the end of the world. Yet in making his fable about a nameless Western society where traditional 'civilisation' has collapsed, Haneke steers clear of traditional disaster movies, and their pyrotechnic spectacles.

He chooses to focus on a traumatised mother Anne (Isabelle Huppert) and her two young children (Lucas Biscombe and Anais Demoustier), and their efforts to survive in a countryside devoid of electricity and running water.

Trudging through deserted villages, they eventually find themselves at a railway depot, where a group of survivors are organised under the leadership of Koslowski (Olivier Gourmet), whom some believe is one of the 36 'just men of prophecy'.

Filmed in widescreen with Haneke's typically precise compositions, Time Of The Wolf uses darkness to heighten the sense of ominousness.

One of the most compelling scenes involves Anne's young boy Benny disappearing from a barn at night, and her and her daughter Eva's frantic search in the blackness, which triggers a blazing fire.

However, the film fails to build on its initial promise, and offers little in the way of dramatic variation. The director has assembled a fascinating cast (as well as Huppert and Gourmet, there's Beatrice Dalle and Patrice Chereau). But they're not used in any especially involving ways. And the matter-of-fact vision of life in such adversity feels predictable: humans resort to xenophobic, tribal behaviour and extremist religious beliefs, the laws of survival ensure that dominant male figures take control, and women become marginalised and forced to trade in sexual favours.

By Haneke's high standards then, it's a minor disappointment, ultimately feeling more evasive than ambiguous.

Time Of The Wolf is released in UK cinemas on Friday 17th October 2003.

End Credits

Director: Michael Haneke

Writer: Michael Haneke

Stars: Isabelle Huppert, Lucas Biscombe, Anais Demoustier, Olivier Gourmet, Patrice Chereau, Beatrice Dalle

Genre: Drama

Length: 113 minutes

Cinema: 2003

Country: USA

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