The strange tale of six brothers and one sister who grew up in New York but were never allowed out to explore the city's streets has become the subject of a new documentary.
The Angulo siblings - Bhagavan, 23, twins Govinda and Narayana, 22, Mukunda, 20, Krisna, 18, Jagadesh, 17, and their sister Visnu - lived with their parents on welfare in a four-bedroom apartment in Manhattan's Lower East Side. Their father, Oscar, kept the only key and the door was always locked.
Home-schooled
by their mother, the siblings found an outlet watching movies which
gave them a taste, albeit a warped one, of the outside world.
The lives of the Angulo family became the subject of film,The Wolfpack, from director Crystal Moselle.
The
documentary won the Grand Jury Prize at the Sundance Film Festival in
Utah last month. The six brothers and their mother Susanne also attended
the premiere. Their sister, Visnu, who is the eldest and suffers
developmental challenges, did not attend.
The
story emerged in 2010, when Ms Moselle met one of the brothers - then
aged between 11 and 18 years old - on a rare escape into the outside
world.
She
described first seeing them, on First Avenue, when they were all
walking in a 'pack', wearing sunglasses and with their long hair
blowing. Their look had been inspired by Reservoir Dogs.
Ms
Moselle said: 'It almost felt as if I had discovered a long lost tribe,
except it was not from the edges of the world but from the streets of
Manhattan.'
The
filmmaker befriended the boys, slowly earned the family's trust and was
invited into their sheltered world, bringing her camera with her.
Ms Moselle said that boy's mother, Susanne Angulo, slowly opened up to her but that the father, was a 'rollercoaster'.
Daily Mail Online was awaiting comment from the film's distributor, Magnolia Pictures.
According to the documentary's blurb, which runs to one hour and 24 minutes, it follows the siblings' isolated lives.
'All
exceedingly bright, they have no acquaintances outside of their family
and have practically never left home,' the film's press release reads.
They
fed their imaginations by meticulously re-enacting favorite movies -
works by Quentin Tarantino, Christopher Nolan and Martin Scorcese among
them.
Their
movie reconstructions were elaborate - at one point, two of the
brothers recreated Batman: Dark Knight Rises' costumes out of no more
than cereal boxes and yoga mats.
The
brother says: 'After I saw the Dark Knight, that made me believe that
something was possible to happen. Not because it was Batman, it’s
because it felt like another world.
'I did everything I could to make that world come true. To escape my world.'
In all they had watched about 5,000 movies which were rented or bought cheaply.
Finally,
one of the brothers escapes the home, and the clan is forced to
readjust and begin taking their first steps into society.
Ms. Moselle told The New York Times: 'It’s fascinating what the human spirit does when it’s confined.
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