Here are review links for this film submitted by our members:
- [New – 11/12/15] | Bill Clark @ From The Balcony
- Excerpt: While plenty of questions permeate the air as the end credits roll, The Wolfpack is a compulsively watchable, borderline hypnotic experience.
- Laura Clifford @ Reeling Reviews
- Excerpt: Moselle appears to have assimilated herself a bit too deeply into this family, observing her wolfpack from the inside out when an outsider’s perspective would have achieved more balance.
- James Jay Edwards @ FilmFracture
- Susan Granger @ www.susangranger.com
- Excerpt: A strange, fascinating documentary…
- Charlie Juhl @ Citizen Charlie
- Excerpt: Sometimes a fascinating study in how not to raise children, The Wolfpack mostly ignores the crux of the entire situation, mental illness, to focus on the situation’s consequences: quirky personalities, fuzzy ideas about the outside world, and a borderline unhealthy fascination with Quentin Tarantino.
- Kristin Dreyer Kramer @ NightsAndWeekends.com
- Marty Mapes @ Movie Habit
- Excerpt: All cooped up with nowhere to go… luckily there are movies
- Alan Mattli @ Facing the Bitter Truth [German]
- Excerpt: The natural charme of Moselle’s protagonist makes you forget that film could, and perhaps should, pursue far higher ambitions.
- Brent McKnight @ The Last Thing I See
- Excerpt: Sad and strange, funny and touching, wholly unusual and like nothing you’ve ever seen before, The Wolfpack is both powerful and unsettling.
- Pat Mullen @ Cinemablographer
- Excerpt: It’s a fascinating subject: like ‘Nell’ meets ‘Room’ meets your high school a/v club.
- Cole Smithey @ ColeSmithey.com
- Excerpt: [VIDEO ESSAY] You just might be hearing more from the “Wolfpack,” as filmmakers in their own right.
- Frank Swietek @ One Guys Opinion
- Excerpt: An engrossing portrait of a decidedly peculiar family, but one in which significant pieces of the puzzle are lacking–or summarily ignored.
- Sarah Ward @ artsHub
- Sarah Ward @ Concrete Playground
- Ron Wilkinson @ Monsters and Critics
- Excerpt: Some films take hundreds of hours of tedious work and countless exhausted nights of ulcerous brooding. Some simply make themselves.