Time of the Wolf  

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 +'''''Time of the Wolf''''' ({{lang-fr|Le temps du loup}}) is a 2003 French [[dystopia]]n [[post-apocalyptic]] [[Drama (film and television)|drama film]] written and directed by Austrian director [[Michael Haneke]]. It was released theatrically in 2003. Set in France at an undisclosed time, the film follows the story of a family: Georges, Anne ([[Isabelle Huppert]]), and their two children, Eva ([[Anaïs Demoustier]]) and Ben ([[Lucas Biscombe]]). The film also stars [[Olivier Gourmet]] and [[Serge Riaboukine]].
-'''Maurice Bénichou''' (23 January 1943 in [[Tlemcen]], [[French Algeria]] – 15 June 2019) was a [[France|French]] actor. His best known roles include three collaborations with director [[Michael Haneke]] (''[[Code inconnu]]'', ''[[Le Temps du Loup]]'', and ''[[Caché (film)|Caché]]''), and a part in [[Jean-Pierre Jeunet]]'s ''[[Amélie]]''. He has also played in [[Peter Brook]]'s 1989 film version of ''[[The Mahabharata (1989 film)|The Mahabharata]]''.+The film takes its title from ''[[Völuspá]]'', an ancient Norse poem which describes the time before the [[Ragnarök]].
-==Filmography==+==Plot==
-* 1968 : ''[[Paris n'existe pas]]'', directed by [[Robert Benayoun]]+A disaster of some type has occurred, of which the audience only knows that uncontaminated water is scarce, and livestock has to be burned. Having fled Paris, the Laurent family arrives at their country home, hoping to find refuge and security, only to discover that it is already occupied by strangers.
-* 1970 : ''[[Les Camisards]]'', directed by [[René Allio]]+ 
-* 1973 : ''[[Le Mariage à la mode]]'', directed by [[Michel Mardore]]+The family is assaulted by the strangers and forced to leave, with no supplies or transport. As they seek help from people they have known in the village, they are repeatedly turned away. The family makes its way to a train station where they wait with other survivors, in the hope that a train will stop for them and take them back to the city.
-* 1975 : ''[[Le Petit Marcel]]'', directed by [[Jacques Fansten]]+ 
-* 1976 : ''[[Un éléphant ça trompe énormément]]'', directed by [[Yves Robert]]+==Cast==
-* 1976 : ''[[La Question]]'', directed by [[Laurent Heynemann]]+* [[Isabelle Huppert]] as Anne Laurent
-* 1977 : ''[[L'Animal]]'', directed by [[Claude Zidi]]+* [[Daniel Duval]] as Georges Laurent
-* 1977 : ''[[Dirty Dreamer]]'', directed by [[Jean-Marie Périer]]+* [[Béatrice Dalle]] as Lise Brandt
-* 1977 : ''[[Les Routes du sud]]'', directed by [[Joseph Losey]]+* [[Patrice Chéreau]] as Thomas Brandt
-* 1977 : ''[[La Vocation suspendue]]'', directed by [[Raoul Ruiz]]+* [[Rona Hartner]] as Arina
-* 1979 : ''[[I as in Icarus|I... comme Icare]]'' (''I as in Icarus''), directed by [[Henri Verneuil]]+* [[Maurice Bénichou]] as M. Azoulay
-* 1980 : ''[[Le Jardinier]]'', directed by [[Jean-Pierre Sentier]]+* [[Olivier Gourmet]] as Koslowski
-* 1981 : ''[[Qu'est-ce qui fait courir David ?]]'', directed by [[Elie Chouraqui]]+* [[Brigitte Roüan]] as Béa
-* 1989 : ''[[The Mahabharata (1989 film)|The Mahabharata]]'', directed by [[Peter Brook]]+* [[Anaïs Demoustier]] as Eva
-* 1990 : ''[[La Fracture du myocarde]]'', directed by [[Jacques Fansten]]+* [[Serge Riaboukine]] as The leader
-* 1992 : ''[[La Petite apocalypse]]'', directed by [[Costa-Gavras]]+* Lucas Biscombe as Ben
-* 1992 : ''[[Fausto (1993 film)|Fausto]]'', directed by [[Rémy Duchemin]]+* Marilyne Even as Mme Azoulay
-* 1993 : ''[[Tout le monde n'a pas eu la chance d'avoir des parents communistes]]'', directed by [[Jean-Jacques Zilbermann]]+* [[Florence Loiret Caille]] as Nathalie Azoulay
-* 1993 : ''[[Les Patriotes]]'', directed by [[Éric Rochant]]+* [[Michaël Abiteboul]] as The Armed man
-* 1995 : ''[[Mordbüro]]'', directed by [[Lionel Kopp]]+
-* 1997 : ''[[L'homme est une femme comme les autres]]'' (''Man Is a Woman''), directed by [[Jean-Jacques Zilbermann]]+
-* 2000 : ''[[Code inconnu]]'', directed by [[Michael Haneke]]+
-* 2000 : ''[[Drôle de Félix]]'', directed by [[Olivier Ducastel]] and [[Jacques Martineau]]+
-* 2000 : ''[[Quand on sera grand]]'', directed by [[Renaud Cohen]]+
-* 2000 : ''[[Amélie]]'', directed by [[Jean-Pierre Jeunet]]+
-* 2001 : ''[[C'est le bouquet !]]'', directed by [[Jeanne Labrune]]+
-* 2002 : ''[[Le Temps du Loup]]'', directed by [[Michael Haneke]]+
-* 2003 : ''[[Qui perd gagne !]]'', directed by [[Laurent Bénégui]]+
-* 2004 : ''[[Caché (film)|Caché]]'', directed by [[Michael Haneke]]+
-* 2005 : ''[[The Passenger (2005 Éric Caravaca film)|Le Passager]]'', directed by [[Éric Caravaca]]+
-* 2006 : ''[[Le Candidat]]'', directed by [[Niels Arestrup]]+
-* 2007 : ''[[Boxes (film)|Boxes]]'', directed by [[Jane Birkin]]+
-* 2007 : ''[[Les Toits de Paris]]'', directed by [[Hiner Saleem]]+
-* 2007 : ''[[Paris (2008 film)|Paris]]'', directed by [[Cédric Klapisch]]+
-* 2008 : ''[[Passe-passe]]'', directed by [[Tonie Marshall]]+
-* 2008 : ''[[Le Grand Alibi]]'', directed by [[Pascal Bonitzer]]+
-* 2011 : ''[[Au cas où je n'aurais pas la palme d'or]]'', directed by [[Renaud Cohen]]+
-* 2011 : ''[[L'amour fraternel]]'', directed by [[Gérard Vergez]]+
-* 2011 : ''[[Omar Killed Me]]'', directed by [[Roschdy Zem]]+
-* 2011 " ''[[Si tu meurs, je te tue]]'', directed by [[Hiner Saleem]]+
-* 2011 : ''[[The Rabbi's Cat (film)|The Rabbi's Cat]]'', directed by [[Joann Sfar]]+
-* 2015 : ''[[The Kind Words]]'', directed by [[:he:שמי זרחין|Shemi Zarhin]] {{he icon}}+
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Time of the Wolf (Template:Lang-fr) is a 2003 French dystopian post-apocalyptic drama film written and directed by Austrian director Michael Haneke. It was released theatrically in 2003. Set in France at an undisclosed time, the film follows the story of a family: Georges, Anne (Isabelle Huppert), and their two children, Eva (Anaïs Demoustier) and Ben (Lucas Biscombe). The film also stars Olivier Gourmet and Serge Riaboukine.

The film takes its title from Völuspá, an ancient Norse poem which describes the time before the Ragnarök.

Plot

A disaster of some type has occurred, of which the audience only knows that uncontaminated water is scarce, and livestock has to be burned. Having fled Paris, the Laurent family arrives at their country home, hoping to find refuge and security, only to discover that it is already occupied by strangers.

The family is assaulted by the strangers and forced to leave, with no supplies or transport. As they seek help from people they have known in the village, they are repeatedly turned away. The family makes its way to a train station where they wait with other survivors, in the hope that a train will stop for them and take them back to the city.

Cast




Unless indicated otherwise, the text in this article is either based on Wikipedia article "Time of the Wolf" or another language Wikipedia page thereof used under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License; or on research by Jahsonic and friends. See Art and Popular Culture's copyright notice.

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