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Review: The Hunt (2012)

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David N. Butterworth

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Sep 18, 2016, 11:15:39 AM9/18/16
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THE HUNT (2012)
A film review by David N. Butterworth
Copyright 2016 David N. Butterworth

***1/2 (out of ****)

Mads Mikkelsen is staggeringly good in Thomas Vinterberg's harrowing drama,
"The Hunt" ("Jagten"). He plays a beloved kindergarten teacher who's
accused of an indecent act by one of his charges (Annika Wedderkopp) and
quickly finds himself ostracized by a community that shoots first, then
shoots again later. This lie, resulting from an immature combination of
embarrassment, jealously, and fear, propagates like a cancer, infecting
everything and everyone it touches. Once spoken, it cannot be undone.
Longtime friendships are compromised and recently-formed relationships
sour. As witnesses to this injustice, we feel Lucas' pain acutely, all the
more so since there is zero proof of impropriety. We know he's innocent.
Yet why would a child lie about something like this? To what end?
Mikkelsen is always worth a watch, whether emoting in his native Danish
("After the Wedding," "A Royal Affair," "Adam's Apples") or playing Bond
villain Le Chiffre in 2006's "Casino Royale," Hannibal Lecter in the NBC
television series "Hannibal," or the accountant in Rihanna's music video
"Bitch Better Have My Money"). In "The Hunt," Mikkelsen plays Lucas
sympathetically. It's a powerful performance, remarkably controlled; Lucas
does not explode in anger or denial but attempts a calm and logical
response. He fails, and as the hysteria mounts, he shuts down emotionally,
incredulous. Vinterberg orchestrates everything intelligently and with
purpose, but it's Mikkelsen who makes this personal horror show his own.

--
David N. Butterworth
rec.arts.movies.reviews
butterwo...@gmail.com

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