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  1. Wolf is a 2021 psychological drama film written and directed by Nathalie Biancheri. An international co-production of Ireland and Poland, it stars George MacKay, Lily-Rose Depp, Paddy Considine, Eileen Walsh, Fionn O'Shea and Lola Petticrew. Wolf had its world premiere at the 2021 Toronto International Film Festival on September 17

  2. www.imdb.com › title › tt10698174Wolf (2021) - IMDb

    Feb 18, 2022 · Wolf: Directed by Nathalie Biancheri. With George MacKay, Stuart Graham, Helen Behan, Lily-Rose Depp. Young Jacob who suffers from zoanthropy believes he is a wolf and is committed to a mental asylum following an attack on his brother.

    • (13K)
    • Drama, Mystery, Thriller
    • Nathalie Biancheri
    • 2022-02-18
  3. Written and directed by Nathalie Biancheri (Nocturnal), Wolf is produced by Jessie Fisk and Jane Doolan for Feline Films. Presented by Focus Features in association with Fís Eireann / Screen ...

    • 2 min
    • 142.8K
    • Universal Pictures Ireland
  4. Believing he is a wolf trapped in a human body, Jacob (George MacKay) eats, sleeps, and lives like a wolf -- much to the shock of his family. When he's sent to a clinic, Jacob and his...

    • (74)
    • Nathalie Biancheri
    • R
    • George Mackay
  5. Dec 3, 2021 · In Nathalie Biancheri's offbeat drama “Wolf,” he is one in a group of teenagers convinced their fragile human bodies dont correspond with their animal identities. Their condition, described as “species dysphoria,” ostracizes them from society.

  6. When Jacob meets a kindred spirit in long-term resident Wildcat (Lily-Rose Depp), he must decide who he wants to be. MacKay gives a performance of feral physicality in a film reminiscent of Yorgos Lanthimos’s work in its mixture of pathos and dry humour.

  7. www.metacritic.com › movie › wolf-2021Wolf - Metacritic

    Dec 3, 2021 · Believing he is a wolf trapped in a human body, Jacob (George MacKay) eats, sleeps, and lives like a wolf – much to the shock of his family. When he’s sent to a clinic, Jacob and his animal-bound peers are forced to undergo increasingly extreme forms of ‘curative’ therapies.