Wolf's Hole (Czech: Vlčí bouda) is a 1987 Czechoslovak science fiction horror film directed by Věra Chytilová. It was entered into the 37th Berlin International Film Festival. The film can be characterized as moralizing horror, but may also be interpreted as an allegory for the atmosphere surrounding the normalization period.
A group of teenagers are invited to a skiing workshop in the mountains, without being told how or why they were picked as participants. There are eleven of them, but the camp supervisors insist that there should be only ten, and that one of them is an intruder. As the group find themselves cut off from the outside world, strange things begin to happen; the supervisors seem intent to create an atmosphere of hostility, turning the participants against each other, even urging them to kill each other. The supervisors eventually reveal themselves as extraterrestrials who demand that the group pick one among them to be sacrificed. They refuse, however, and in a panic set the cottage on fire and make a narrow escape on a lift used for timber transport, leaving no man behind.
There are 14 films with the same director, 75408 with the same cinematographic genres (including 81 with exactly the same 4 genres than Wolf's Hole), to have finally 70 suggestions of similar films.
If you liked Wolf's Hole, you will probably like those similar films :
, 1h30 Directed byVěra Chytilová OriginTchecoslovaquie GenresDrama, Comedy ActorsJiří Kodet, František Filipovský Rating68% Au début des années 1960, les réalisatrices étaient bien plus nombreuses dans le bloc de l’Est que de l’autre côté du Rideau de Fer, à l’instar de Věra Chytilová, figure de la Nouvelle Vague tchécoslovaque. "Quelque chose d’autre", réunit deux parcours de femmes, l’un fictif et l’autre réel : celui de la gymnaste et future médaillée d’or Eva Bosáková, qui joue ici son propre rôle.
, 1h39 Directed byVěra Chytilová OriginTchecoslovaquie GenresDrama, Fantasy ActorsJan Schmidt Rating66% Un récit expérimental de l'histoire d'Adam et Eve qui évolue ensuite vers une représentation allégorique de la perte de l'innocence.