Hard to follow, 'Wolf' moves at a laborious pace with often little dialogue spoken focussing instead on shadowy visuals and meaningless speculation as the central character begins having strange encounters as he prepares to sell his family home in the country.
The sense of isolation and impending doom achieved is sometimes suspenseful with a couple of decent jump-scares, but the film lets the baited audience off the hook with its pondering and incessant cutaways which paralyse any prospect for action or much needed momentum. If the film was attempting a euphemism with the wolf sub plot then I missed the point, but then the story is often so incoherent that it's difficult to process exactly what's happening. Disappointingly, the ambiguous ending fails to add any clarity, the film simply ends mid-scene as the principal characters make meaningless small talk.
Tighter editing, more dialogue and a better evolved storyline was needed to address the lingering confusion in what is otherwise a technically well-photographed ultra low budget film apparently trying to merge rural folklore with psychological drama.