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Carter's first draft of the screenplay, which contains some differences from the finished film, has been published in her anthology ''[[The Curious Room]]'' ([[1996 in literature|1996]]).
Carter's first draft of the screenplay, which contains some differences from the finished film, has been published in her anthology ''[[The Curious Room]]'' ([[1996 in literature|1996]]).


==Synopsis==
==Synopsis==
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{{spoiler}}



Revision as of 21:34, 21 November 2006

The Company of Wolves
File:Company of Wolves DVD.jpg
Directed byNeil Jordan
Written byAngela Carter,
Neil Jordan
Produced byChris Brown,
Stephen Woolley
StarringSarah Patterson,
Angela Lansbury,
Stephen Rea,
David Warner
Music byGeorge Fenton
Distributed byITC
Cannon/Hen's Tooth (U.S.)
Release dates
Canada 15 September, 1984 (premiere at TIFF)
United Kingdom September 21, 1984
United States 19 April, 1985
Running time
95 mins.
LanguageEnglish
Budget$2,000,000 (estimated)

The Company of Wolves is a 1984 fantasy-horror film directed by Neil Jordan, and starring Sarah Patterson and Angela Lansbury.

The film is based on the werewolf stories in Angela Carter's short story collection The Bloody Chamber ("The Company of Wolves", "Wolf-Alice" and "The Werewolf"). Carter herself co-wrote the screenplay with director Neil Jordan.

Carter's first draft of the screenplay, which contains some differences from the finished film, has been published in her anthology The Curious Room (1996).

Synopsis

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The film concerns Rosaleen, a thirteen year-old girl. The story is set almost entirely within her dreams. She imagines herself as a Red Riding Hood analog, encountering dangerous wolves and sexually charged werewolves who threaten the safety of her fairytale village.

At several points within her dream, Rosaleen either tells or is told fairytale-like stories about werewolves, witches and the Devil.

The film emphasises the psychological and sexual allegory that underlies fairy tales and the werewolf myth. The stories that Rosaleen hears and the creatures that she encounters represent the frightening but empowering onset of puberty.

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Trivia

  • Due to budgetary constraints and other factors, most of the 'wolves' shown in the film are Belgian Shepherd Dogs, mainly Terveurens and Groenendals.
  • The use of lycanthropy as a metaphor for an adolescant girl's burgeoning sexuality is also used in the film Ginger Snaps.

External links