- Awards
- 1 win & 3 nominations total
Pierre Cévaër
- Veilleur sonar SNA
- (as Pierre Cevaër)
- Director
- Writer
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
Very engaging film. From start to finish it hooked me and there was never a dull moment. Good actors, well thought out plot with excellent follow through in its development.
Will watch again and highly recommend it.
Will watch again and highly recommend it.
If you're into military thrillers, movies like Failsafe, you might like this. It has plenty of twists, good pacing, and a unlikely hero, a flawed sonar man who loves his country and is very good at his job.
The movie is not free of tactical and strategic logic holes, but the pacing, progression of events, f/x, live shots at sea, military action dialogue, and story keep you locked in. For English only viewers, the English dub is excellent.
The movie is not free of tactical and strategic logic holes, but the pacing, progression of events, f/x, live shots at sea, military action dialogue, and story keep you locked in. For English only viewers, the English dub is excellent.
The sound expert Chanteraide holds the life of his fellow mates in his hands. Onboard high tech submarine Titan a small mistake leads to a confrontation with a mysterious submarine. As the danger of a next war becomes all too real, it's up to Titan and its crew to save the day.
Wolf's Call is the first feature from screen writer Antonin Boudry and it is a tense and inventive thriller where an approaching global disaster is played out on a smaller scale and rests on the shoulders of a few men. Handpicking his hot young stars, the trio of Omar Sy, Francois Civil, and Reda Kateb, Boudry builds on the relationship between the three men, throwing the characters into the crisis of a life time.
A minimalistic score by Tomandandy nicely supports the vast underwater scenes and claustrophobic in-cabin sequences. It is no wonder the film was snatched up by Netflix, it has an interesting concept, well written and acted.
WOLF'S CALL proves that a smaller scale underwater thriller can be tense and engaging even with a very restricted budget.
Wolf's Call is the first feature from screen writer Antonin Boudry and it is a tense and inventive thriller where an approaching global disaster is played out on a smaller scale and rests on the shoulders of a few men. Handpicking his hot young stars, the trio of Omar Sy, Francois Civil, and Reda Kateb, Boudry builds on the relationship between the three men, throwing the characters into the crisis of a life time.
A minimalistic score by Tomandandy nicely supports the vast underwater scenes and claustrophobic in-cabin sequences. It is no wonder the film was snatched up by Netflix, it has an interesting concept, well written and acted.
WOLF'S CALL proves that a smaller scale underwater thriller can be tense and engaging even with a very restricted budget.
Reading the reviews here, it seems to be a love it or hate it movie - I don't understand why. I grew up watching the original Das Boot as TV series and went through all the submarine movies. Instead of comparing the incomparable and saying what is flawed etc., I simply want to point out what I liked watching this movie twice:
- refreshing actor set, no B-movie characters just like "could be your neighbour" type
- storyline that could happen, although we normal people would never hear about it
- great music/ambience perfectly fitting the setting
- straightforward effects, less is more
- happy end without happy end, evoked emotions
- overall a very refreshing, non-cliche Hollywood-type movie.
There's a lot of reviews here making points such as "could not happen".
Ok sure, there's some unrealistic stuff going on.
But there's also a lot of original and thoughtful scenes that are explored. There's a lot of ideas here that feel completely fresh.
The idea that a French submarine, once committed to a nuclear strike, will not receive any orders to abort, is a weak one. Unfortunately a large part of the movie hinges around this concept. The second half of the movie does feel a little silly at times because of this.
I liked the sonar guy as the hero.
Ok sure, there's some unrealistic stuff going on.
But there's also a lot of original and thoughtful scenes that are explored. There's a lot of ideas here that feel completely fresh.
The idea that a French submarine, once committed to a nuclear strike, will not receive any orders to abort, is a weak one. Unfortunately a large part of the movie hinges around this concept. The second half of the movie does feel a little silly at times because of this.
I liked the sonar guy as the hero.
Did you know
- TriviaA "Wolf's Call' is a navy slang for active sonar alarm. That means the submarine is detected and targeted. Active sonars sound very different to the human ear based on the transmission frequency. Low-frequency sonars are a very deep, like a moaning bass. Medium frequency sonars are like some synth doing an imitation of whale songs. High frequency sonars are strident and creepy like "howlings."
- GoofsThe missile targeting France was launched from the Pacific Ocean, near Kamchatka. According to the movie, it flies above Russia, then Eastern Europe. With Earth being round, it would have most certainly flown above the North Pole.
- Quotes
Aristotle: The human beings come in three kinds: the living, dead and those who go to sea.
- ConnectionsReferenced in Notre-Dame brûle (2022)
- How long is The Wolf's Call?Powered by Alexa
Details
Box office
- Gross worldwide
- $12,652,790
- Runtime
- 1h 55m(115 min)
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 2.39 : 1
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