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La meute

  • 2010
  • R
  • 1h 24m
IMDb RATING
4.8/10
2.3K
YOUR RATING
Yolande Moreau in La meute (2010)
Trailer for The Pack
Play trailer0:50
2 Videos
32 Photos
Horror

One winter morning, while driving through the desolate French countryside, traveler Charlotte picks up hitchhiker Max. Together they stop at a roadside diner, where a strange and depraved ho... Read allOne winter morning, while driving through the desolate French countryside, traveler Charlotte picks up hitchhiker Max. Together they stop at a roadside diner, where a strange and depraved horror awaits.One winter morning, while driving through the desolate French countryside, traveler Charlotte picks up hitchhiker Max. Together they stop at a roadside diner, where a strange and depraved horror awaits.

  • Director
    • Franck Richard
  • Writer
    • Franck Richard
  • Stars
    • Yolande Moreau
    • Émilie Dequenne
    • Benjamin Biolay
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    4.8/10
    2.3K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Franck Richard
    • Writer
      • Franck Richard
    • Stars
      • Yolande Moreau
      • Émilie Dequenne
      • Benjamin Biolay
    • 25User reviews
    • 81Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 4 wins & 1 nomination total

    Videos2

    The Pack (2010)
    Trailer 0:50
    The Pack (2010)
    The Pack (2010)
    Trailer 0:45
    The Pack (2010)
    The Pack (2010)
    Trailer 0:45
    The Pack (2010)

    Photos32

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    + 28
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    Top cast21

    Edit
    Yolande Moreau
    Yolande Moreau
    • La Spack
    Émilie Dequenne
    Émilie Dequenne
    • Charlotte Massot
    Benjamin Biolay
    Benjamin Biolay
    • Max
    Philippe Nahon
    Philippe Nahon
    • Chinaski
    Matthias Schoenaerts
    Matthias Schoenaerts
    • Le Gothique en toc
    Ian Fonteyn
    • Tofu
    Georges Lini
    • Motard 1
    Philippe Résimont
    Philippe Résimont
    • Motard 2
    Brice Fournier
    • Motard 3 (John Grizzly)
    Nicolas Leroy
    • Golem 1
    Mathieu Bouteligier
    • Golem 2
    François Doms
    • Golem 3
    Benoît Vivien
    • Golem 4
    Eric Godon
    Eric Godon
    • Jean-Jean
    Joris Strickx
    • Blé
    Mamy Camara
    • Mort
    Boris Van Wambeke
    • Enfant
    Jean-Marie Barbier
    • Vieux station
    • Director
      • Franck Richard
    • Writer
      • Franck Richard
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews25

    4.82.3K
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    10

    Featured reviews

    7Simonster

    Meandering but still entertaining sort-of-Zombie film

    Viewed at the Festival du Film, Cannes 2010

    One of the best things about the Festival is how everyone who loves film, whether it's for fun or profit, often piles into a cinema for a shared experience, whereby you get folks of all nationalities and tastes often watching a film they normally might not bother with. The Pack is a perfect example.

    This is a cross-genre horror film that also wants to make some social comments, especially about the how and why of the creatures, hence my use of "meandering" in the summary. As has been mentioned by a previous poster, it starts as one film, changes to another and then goes a different way. At the same time, the elements do work, perhaps better individually than as a whole. Even so, The Pack is fun and it's nice to see a European horror film get a good reception.

    The usual genre rules are there: Don't pick up hitchhikers, don't stop at a desolate restaurant run by a weirdo, don't get caged up in the basement as a snack for locally marauding monsters. In fact, maybe give all of France and Belgium a miss?

    There are the obligatory jumps and shocks, some black humour, the requisite gore and the final last standard. In that sense don't expect anything new from The Pack. But at the same time there is a sure hand on the tiller, except for this meandering, which could have been sorted out at script stage. It doesn't damage the film as more as weaken the effect it could have. But my criticism is more the disappointment of how a good film misses being great, so on that basis The Pack was given a very good reception and makes for some enjoyable thrills, chills and spills.
    4kosmasp

    Some things should stay buried

    But then again we would have missed out on a very suspenseful and very good beginning of this movie. But somewhere after one third of the movie it changes gears drastically ... and unfortunately it looses almost all of its drive. Movies that change "lanes" or "gears" are not uncommon (the original From Dusk til Dawn being the most recognizable), but in this instance it just does not work in favor of the movie.

    It should have stayed with the humor and pace it established at the beginning instead of trying to experiment too much. Sometimes a few glimpses of that shine through in the latter part of the movie. Still not enough to make this worth-while and a very disappointing ending concludes the whole thing. A shame then, but maybe the director can and will come up with something better next time around.
    6gavin6942

    France Takes a Cue From the Saw and Hostel Crowd

    In the middle of a snowy no man's land, Charlotte Massot (Emilie Dequenne) picks up Max (Benjamin Biolay), a hitchhiker; they stop in a truck-stop restaurant... hilarity ensues.

    Trying to define this movie, or even give it a coherent plot, is a bit of a challenge. There are definitely elements of "Saw" or "Hostel" with the torture sequences. But that is not the focus. There are zombies (or something like zombies), but it is not a zombie film. And there are outlaws that conjure up images of "Mad Max", but it is not really like that either. Does this film fit into a category? No. Which, I suppose, is both a compliment and a complaint.

    I will say that the film was beautifully shot and the special effects far exceed the low budget American films that come out these days. I am not aware what the budget of this film was, but I am willing to bet it was not nearly the amount it appears to be. The cinematographer and special effects crew deserve every bit of praise heaped on them.
    7Bloodwank

    Rather good fun if slightly scrappy rural horror shenanigans

    I wonder whether the script for this one was complete before filming began or whether they just made things up as they went along. The film is a tonal mish-mash, falling into three distinct segments of notably varying seriousness, starting as a coarsely comic affair it then moves into dark "woman in peril" territory, ending in the realms of loopy siege horror. Fortunately things are underpinned by a fine lead, inspired villain and constant dark ambiance that is rather chilling at times. We follow the attractive young Charlotte Massot, driving across France when she picks up a long-haired hitcher. Stopping off at a roadside restaurant they narrowly miss getting raped before Charlottes new friend goes missing and things get worse from here. The film combines numerous backwoods horror tropes into one tasty brew, geographic isolation and cultural isolation with all character bar the heroine being rather strange, threat of being raped, threat of being eaten, broad characters and wonky dialogue, all dealt out with mania that never winks at the audience, no matter what the cliché. Handy performances give this one a big leg up, Emilie Duquenne is a delightful lead, tough but convincingly frayed when things get nasty, and affectingly traumatised when her ordeal gets nasty. Eric Godon gives suitably greased up and shifty vibes as the hitchhiker, while Philip Nahon plays things broad as a dirty minded cop. Highest marks go to Yolande Moreau as physically imposing, fearsomely tough restaurant owner La Spack, homely looks and unwieldy size hiding creepy malevolence and impressive vigor. Director Franck Richard largely plays things unflashy but has some imaginative flair, the film is focused less on action or big setpieces than mood, with plenty of time spent highlighting the grim and grimy art direction, bleak surroundings and atmospheric outdoor conditions. Some gore, though the gore scenes are around just long enough to be appreciable rather than dwelt on. Score and sound design brood, erupting in industrial pounding when events really hot up, a good complement to the visuals. Tighter handling would have helped this one, also some better dialogue but altogether I had a great time. Well worth a look for loopy backwoods/hicksploitation horror enthusiasts.
    4effactor

    I love horror but I can't defend this one.

    First off, I'm sick of "tough girl" lead roles. A cigarette, leather jacket and a sneer is not character development.

    As the plot developed it also dragged. I was wondering if it was going to be another "hostel" or similar torture/gore flick. And, I was starting to get annoyed because, I was already bored. Then came the twist of "The Pack" being revealed and it was original. It got my attention and I thought it might pick up.

    Problem, every single character in this movie was such an overacted, quirky oddball, that the creatures are underwhelming. There is no prior reference to where they came from in the landscape or on the road traveled. The explanation of them is hastily thrown at you with a few unconvincing news clippings found later. The policeman was just a stupid character in a stupid shirt and according to the films own time line everyone was wearing the same exact clothes for a week (I know its France and that is a possibility). The biker crew was ridiculously awful, especially the one that wouldn't stop giggling. They reacted with the slightest skepticism when told monsters are coming to get them. When the big gory action scene comes you just don't care.

    It was a very slow movie. There was not enough script to fill an hour and a half. With a bad, weird dream sequence ending that gives no closure.

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    Related interests

    Mia Farrow in Rosemary's Baby (1968)
    Horror

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Matthias Schoenaerts's first French film.
    • Goofs
      Upon arrival at the saloon, Charlotte's car is parked to the left of the saloon's front doors. When the cyclist arrives, the car now appears to be to the right of the doors.
    • Connections
      Featured in WatchMojo: Top 10 Scariest Movie Monsters (2016)
    • Soundtracks
      Track Race
      Performed by Cafe Flesh

      Written and composed by Thomas Baudelin, Jérome Bossuyt, Philippe Lafaye & Vincent Lopez

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    FAQ17

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • September 29, 2010 (France)
    • Countries of origin
      • France
      • Belgium
    • Official site
      • Official site
    • Language
      • French
    • Also known as
      • The Pack
    • Production companies
      • La Fabrique 2
      • BE-FILMS
      • Canal+
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • €2,870,000 (estimated)
    • Gross worldwide
      • $274,839
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 24m(84 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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