Shamanism. Based on real events. After the death of her husband, the French musician Corinne wants to distract herself and goes to shoot a documentary about shamans. There she enters the spirit of the wolf, and now, according to all the laws of the local religion, a woman is obliged to become a shaman. Of course, she doesn’t want it at first, but by shamanistic standards she gives up very quickly. To other potential shamans, spirits come for a long time, for years trying to break their will, forcing them to communicate with them in shamanistic trances. All Corinne saw was the “spirit of the mountain” and heard a piano from an empty room that her husband had once played. And that's it - she is ready to become a shaman, encroaching on the opportunity to see her deceased husband.
When Corinne calls himself a wolf at the end of the film, it’s not a pretty metaphor. A shaman is a “spiritual man”, that is, a spirit (demon in European terminology) finds in a person a body and a soul. “You won’t like it,” Corinne says of her new identity to her friend Louise. I'll take Louise's side: I didn't like it either.