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MISHA AND THE WOLVES

by Sam Hobkinson

synopsis

A young orphaned girl survives the Holocaust by fleeing her home in search of her parents, escaping Nazis by sticking to the woods and living with wolves. Author Misha Defonseca’s story is an incredible one, and not just because of the wolves. Her memoir took the world by storm, but fallout with her publisher-turned-detective exposes the shocking truth beneath Misha’s deception. A real-life mystery unfolds, with a slate of characters individually revealing pieces of the puzzle in this stranger-than-fiction revelation. Reenactments, interviews, and archival footage stylishly blend to tell a vivid story about truth, deception, and self-preservation in director Sam Hobkinson’s engrossing film. Each peeled-back layer is met with surprise, prompting larger questions as the story twists and turns. Whom do we trust, and what motivates deception? Where does the line blur between victim and perpetrator? Hobkinson brings fresh understanding and perspective to a story that might sound familiar to some, while delivering a gripping plunge for anyone new to the saga of Misha and her wolves.

international title: Misha and the Wolves
original title: Misha and the Wolves
country: United Kingdom, Belgium
sales agent: Met Film Sales
year: 2021
genre: documentary
directed by: Sam Hobkinson
film run: 90'
screenplay: Sam Hobkinson
cinematography by: Will Pugh
film editing: Peter Norrey
producer: Poppy Dixon, Al Morrow, Matthew Wells, Gregory Zalcman, Jurgen Buedts
executive producer: Stewart Le Marechal, Thomas Høegh, Vesna Cudic, Jonny Persey, Adrian Sibley, Mandy Chang, Hayley Reynolds, Martin Pieper, Barbara Truyen
production: Arts Alliance Productions, Met Film Production, Bright Yellow Films, Las Belgas, Take Five
backing: Flanders Audiovisual Fund (VAF) (BE), Creative Europe MEDIA

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