The listing, NIP "Red Riding Hood" has ended.
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In a medieval village a beautiful young girl falls for an orphaned woodcutter, much to her family's displeasure. When her sister is killed by the werewolf that prowls the dark forest surrounding their village, the people call on a famed werewolf hunter to help them kill the wolf. As the death toll rises with each moon, the girl begins to suspect that the werewolf could be someone she loves. Panic grips the town as she discovers that she has a unique connection to the beast--one that inexorably draws them together, making her both suspect...and bait.
This is not your grandmother's "Red Riding Hood". There's a basket of goodies (not exactly the edible kind), a sweet grandma, a winsome young lass in a beautiful red hood, and a Big Bad Wolf. But there the similarity ends. This "Red Riding Hood" is shot through the lens of the "Twilight"films--for wide appeal to the tween and teen audiences, and definitely "not" a bedtime story for the little ones. Helmed by "Twilight" director Catherine Hardwicke, "Red Riding Hood" bears a lot of the moody trademarks of the vampire series. Valerie, the plucky girl in the stunning cape, lives in a tiny medieval village whose geography is not specified--it's just very mountainous and remote. Her heart belongs to her childhood friend, but as "Red Riding Hood" opens, she learns she has been betrothed to Henry. As if that love triangle weren't enough, it seems a dangerous wolf--or is it werewolf?--has been terrorizing the town for years, and its killing sprees have intensified. When the townsfolk kill a wolf, they think they have finally freed their town from tyranny, and throw a giant bacchanal--like Burning Man in the snow. But then Father Solomon appears on the scene to tell the villagers they've killed only a gray wolf--not, in fact, the werewolf he knows is the true villain.