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Hidden

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Hidden (2009)

March. 04,2009
|
5.6
|
R
| Horror Thriller
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Painful memories arise when Kai Koss inherits his dead mother's house and goes back to his childhood home after 19 years.

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Reviews

Karry
2009/03/04

Best movie of this year hands down!

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VeteranLight
2009/03/05

I don't have all the words right now but this film is a work of art.

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Afouotos
2009/03/06

Although it has its amusing moments, in eneral the plot does not convince.

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Tayyab Torres
2009/03/07

Strong acting helps the film overcome an uncertain premise and create characters that hold our attention absolutely.

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foutainoflife
2009/03/08

Is anyone else confused?Let's start with how well this film has been shot. The locations chosen as the backdrop for this story were awesome. The beautiful waterfall, surrounded by a grim forest and a dilapidated house are visually perfect for a horror film. This setting is probably what I liked most about it. It had a fair amount of suspense and a small amount of blood but I really can't agree that this falls into the horror genre. I watched this because I found it on a list of the best foreign horror films so my expectations may have been set a bit high but I was disappointed. Without writing a bunch of my thoughts, I'll just say that in my opinion, this movie was all over the place and left too many unanswered questions for me to consider it a top notch flick. It just failed to deliver.

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princebansal1982
2009/03/09

Skjult is an above average horror movie. The cinematography is just excellent especially for a horror movie. There are enough scares throughout to keep you firmly in your seat.But is does follow the standard plot of a horror movie. A mystery, a lot of scares and then a big reveal in the end. But the pacing is quite good throughout. And the big reveal doesn't feels anticlimactic like it does in so many horror movies.Technically the movie is very slick. Everybody has done a good job in acting but nothing really special. Overall a very satisfying horror movie.

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Scarecrow-88
2009/03/10

After a puzzling opening involving two young boys, in a wilderness near a highway, with a resulting car crash thanks in part to one of the children running across the road in front of an oncoming semi, Pål Øie's Skjult(Hidden) introduces us to Kai Koss, who has returned to his home after a 19 year absence because his mother has passed on. He wears the baggage of an obviously traumatic past on his weary face. There's an anger very present as we see him snap his mother's dead finger with pleasure, announcing to her that she will burn. He proceeds, two gasoline canisters in hand, with plans to set his wretched mother's house, which is falling apart and in ruin, on fire. Fortunate for the house, a female cop, Sara(Cecilie A Mosli), who once knew Kai, interferes before he can commence with such plans. Staying in a hotel near his home, it's not long until two teenagers come up missing, and he becomes a suspect since nothing was wrong until he returned. He doesn't make friends(Kai is not a people person)and as a search party works throughout the wilderness, Kai informs Sara that Peter is the one responsible for what is transpiring.The movie certainly implicates Kai for the murders committed in the film. He was at the house when the mortician's daughter and her boyfriend were rambling about inside. His hallucinations of his mother, and possibly Peter, the brother Kai believes never fell to his doom down the waterfall. His presence when two are searching through Kai's house for any clues regarding the two kids gone missing. The heart wrenching fact that Kai was tormented as a child, never to grow into a functional human being. Perhaps after failed foster care and adoptions, he had somehow integrated into society, Kai's return to the place which had left him a scarred and broken man certainly isn't good for the soul. He's anti-social, never able, it seems, to even crack a smile, miserable and haunted, Kristopher Loner's eyes alone tell all we need to know, if the burns on different parts of the body aren't enough. We see the secret room, hidden away in the basement of the house, the perfect place to torture someone and not get caught. This room itself is quite foreboding, a prison where no one can hear you scream. The ominous figure in a red hoody, ever present, yet photographed as if an apparition, it's hard not to ponder if this is Peter or a personality adopted by Kai's damaged psyche. The murders are definitely real, sharpened sticks stabbing into victims unaware of the killer just behind them..the question is whether Peter is real or just Kai masquerading as him, not knowing it is he who is actually the one killing folks.Exquisitely photographed by Sjur Aarthun, who has an effective way of capturing Loner's face and the atmospheric surroundings of the wilderness and Kai's mother's creepy house(which seems to represent the ugliness and sinister nature of it's former owner), methodically paced, and director Pål Øie gradually develops Kai's dilemma as signs of his guilt build against him. What I think is Skjult's greatest success if how we sympathize with the lead character because of what he had to endure as a child, understanding just why he's a tortured soul with little room to wiggle out of his inevitable plight..so few are able to escape from such experiences, evolving into a normal person without mental hang-ups. There's enough ambiguity present, questioning what is real and unreal in regards to certain occurrences involving Kai, what he sees, and who are affected by his return home. What is always certain is that Kai's fate seems destined to end in tragedy..he may've escaped from the room which kept him prisoner, but Kai was never really free.

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syfyboy
2009/03/11

I never ever watched a Norwegian movie before, so at first I didn't not know what to expect, I had some reservations. The pace of the movie is slow throughout the entire movie and it's not a bad thing. As others commented the cinematography is very good, the scenery is beautiful in its own way. The few plot holes didn't bothered me that much as I was concentrated more to figure out who the killer was. I think that the main actor (Kai Koss) was the killer (I think) because in the woods when he meets Peter, facing him, his movements are the same as Peter's, in the photo he sees the blond boy, but when Sara looks at the picture the head is ripped of and the boy has no red balls in his hands...and many more clues. The acting was OK, it could have been better, some situations were sometimes not credible or just plain stupid. Overall it was an interesting look inside a Nordic horror movie...Not bad at all...

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