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Documentary sensation Wolfpack opens Hong Kong Sundance festival

Director to attend Q&A after screening of her film about six cloistered brothers who live life through the movies they see

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A still from the film featuring (from left) Mukunda, Jagadisa and Krsna Angulo.
A still from the film featuring (from left) Mukunda, Jagadisa and Krsna Angulo.
A still from the film featuring (from left) Mukunda, Jagadisa and Krsna Angulo.
The six fraternal cinephiles known as The Wolfpack entered the Beacon Theatre in New York earlier this year for a reunion screening of . The film was one of the young men's favourites, and they were excited to watch it on the big screen with some of the cast members present.
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"We've seen it hundreds of times, maybe more," says Bhagavan Angulo, 23, the oldest brother, a low-key personality.

"It's like sometimes, OK, our mum is making a big Italian dinner? Let's do ," says Mukunda Angulo, 20, the fourth-oldest and one of the most outgoing.

A moment later he pauses and looks around at the stately confines of the Beacon, to which none of the brothers had ever been. "This place is very ."

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"Doing" movies has been a long-time tradition for the Angulos, who grew up in a housing development on New York's Lower East Side with a rural Midwestern mother and a South American-born father who converted to Hare Krishna.

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