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Director's Statement
BULLHEAD is a crime drama about gangsters and farmers against the backdrop of the Belgian cattle hormones mafia. It's a film about friendship and loyalty, betrayal and lost innocence. It is also a film about cows and police informers, about bulls and headbutts, about West-Flanders meets Limburg. Although it is loosely based on the 1995 assassination of veterinary inspector Karel Van Noppen, BULLHEAD is not a true crime story. In the words of director MICHAEL ROSKAM, "BULLHEAD relates to the hormones mafia like Hamlet relates to the Danish royal family." Leading man Matthias Schoenaerts underwent two years of physical training and gained 27 kg to prepare for the role of Jacky Vanmarsenille, a young cattle farmer who, after a tragic event in his childhood, gets addicted to testosterone injections, turning him into a tormented muscle machine. Schoenaerts and his co-actors also worked hard at mastering the local dialects of Limburg and West Flanders. "BULLHEAD is a grotesque tragedy about fate and how our lives are sometimes determined by events over which we have no control," Roskam says about his debut film. "It is a film about people being driven to extremes. It is not about cowboys and Indians, about good or evil, but about how seemingly small events can sometimes have huge consequences for the people Involved. Their fate is also their destiny."