Things are never what they appear on screen.
The art of film making consists in telling a story inside a story, in using subtleties and hidden (sometimes not so hidden) meanings to convey a concept, an idea, to makes us thing about the nature of our existence.
In that aspect The Wolf Hour is like any other movie, but there is a fundamental difference that changes The Wolf Hour from a regular movie to a wonderful experience.
In essence, all movies are the same, right?
We have a setting, we are introduced to the characters, and then something unforeseeable happens to those characters, and then we got ourselves a movie.
What is different about The Wolf Hour is that, very simply, nothing happens.
We are not watching the beginnings of a disturbance in a character's life, in The Wolf Hour that disturbance already happened, and instead what we're dealing with is the aftermath of said disturbance.
When we first meet June she is in a bad place, in every aspect that is possible for a modern human being to be: physically, emotionally and economically.
We are immediately drawn to the question "What happened to that woman?"
And as the movie progresses, we get answers to that question. Those answers come in various forms, hidden in conversations, shown to us through an old cassete tape, through a phone call, through an incredible act of faith that takes form in a "Hail Mary" request for the odd delivery boy.
What we witness on screen are not exactly the actions of June, since she is just going through the motions, uncertain of her future, but what drives her to take those actions and her reaction the the way they unfold.
The Wolf Hour is a deep and emotional character study of a once great woman who let her insecurities and fears get the best of her, and how in the darkest moment she sees clearly what's most important to her in life.
It's an honest take on how life can get you down beyond your worst nightmares, nut how your worst enemy will always be yourself. You will always be the person to beat.
In the end, I think we all see ourselves in June. I know I did.
"Is that character you?"