Hatching – Pahanhautoja Movie Storyline. Finnish thriller movie Hatching (Pahanhautoja) centers on Tinja, a 12-year-old gymnast desperate to please her mother, a woman obsessed with presenting the image of a perfect family to the world through her popular blog. A young Tinja girl tries to realize her demanding mother’s dream by succeeding in rack gymnastics. Tinja’s mother introduces the world to her talented daughter and her idyllic happy family life in her popular video blog. One night Tinja finds a strange bird egg. He hides the egg in his room and incubates it secretly under his blanket until something hatches from the egg that upsets them all.
Hatching (Finnish: Pahanhautoja) is a 2022 Finnish body horror film directed by Hanna Bergholm and written by Ilja Rautsi. The film stars Jani Volanen, Reino Nordin, Saija Lentonen, Siiri Solalinna and Sophia Heikkilä. It premiered at the 2022 Sundance Film Festival on January 23, 2022.
At the end of June 2020 IFC Midnight acquired the distribution rights to the film. The plan was to first release the feature film at a major international festival in 2022 before releasing it in cinemas and VOD platforms. It premiered at the 2022 Sundance Film Festival on January 23, 2022. The film ğot for a limited theatrical release on April 29, 2022
A trailer for the film was released in February 2021. Brad Miska of Bloody Disgusting commented on the trailer, comparing it favorably to the 1990 film Meet the Applegates and writing that it “sits comfortably toward the top of my must-see list.” IndieWire’s Eric Kohn also made mention of the film in their list of Cannes 2021 predictions, writing that it “could appeal to fans of the Swedish monster movie, ‘Border’ — which won the Un Certain Regard prize at Cannes in 2018 — but with an extra dose of commentary of the social media curation of one’s lives so many of us engage in.
The monster of the film was portrayed by an animatronic puppet, created by the lead animatronic designer Gustav Hoegen and his team, who previously worked on such properties as Star Wars, Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom and 2010’s Clash of the Titans. As the monster evolves, instead of the puppet, it is played by different performers. The special effects make-up was designed by Academy Award-nominated effects artist Conor O’Sullivan, known for his work on Game of Thrones, X-Men: First Class, Saving Private Ryan and Aliens.
Film Review for Hatching – Pahanhautoja
Motherhood is scary stuff. From “Rosemary’s Baby” through to “The Babadook” and “Hereditary,” a certain breed of horror film has taught us as much. Equally disturbing, in Hanna Bergholm’s inventive, alarmingly sunny genre outing “Hatching,” is adolescence: lurking under a protective mother’s wings, waiting to crack and come of age in a Finnish suburb’s suffocating, expertly calibrated atmosphere.
But “Hatching” is no blood-soaked “Carrie.” One could instead think of it as the weird lovechild of “American Beauty” and a grotesque version of “E.T.,” with the uncanny touch of Yorgos Lanthimos. Even this comparison feels incomplete in defining Bergholm’s directorial debut, a wicked foray into youthful anxieties that is admitted short on genuine scares, but full of delicious squirms and cringes through Bergholm’s skillful play with body horror and doppelgänger tropes — the same spirit that gave us both Robert Louis Stevenson’s “Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde” and Andrzej Żuławski’s “Possession.”
Written by Ilja Rautsi, the story centers on Tinja (sensational newcomer Siiri Solalinna), a dollishly wide-eyed, lonely tween gymnast who’d do anything to impress her overbearing, unnamed mother (Sophia Heikkilä, subtly terrifying), be it malnourishing herself for the sake of sport or practicing a flip on high bars until her hands bleed.
And who can blame Tinja after meeting her mom? Arrogantly domineering beneath a façade of fake smiles and forced kindness, she passive-aggressively pushes her daughter’s limits for an upcoming gymnastics tournament, and diligently posts videos on her popular “Lovely Everyday Life” blog. We soon see that the image-obsessed suburbanite is concerned not with authentic living, but with curating an idyllic, Instagram-ready existence for others to envy.
What fractures the family’s manicured reality is a wounded bird that one day barges into their comically pink-and-pastel living room. (Heavy on floral wallpapers, Päivi Kettunen’s eye-popping production design bursts with humor and unease, matched by Ulrika Sjölin’s purposely tacky-preppy costuming on Heikkilä.) Mesmerized in the aftermath of the curious episode, Tinja can’t help but wander out to the woods, bringing back a mysterious egg that she nests inside her giant teddy bear. Gradually,
Tinja starts building a bond with her rapidly growing discovery, keeping it a secret from her pesky little brother, happy-go-lucky father and probing mother. Things only get more complicated once the egg hatches, unveiling a winged, screeching, skin-and-bones creature with giant eyes, flat nostrils and an intimidatingly long beak — resembling less a horror movie monster than a childishly primal creature of the Harry Potter universe.
From this point, Bergholm and Rautsi fashion a somewhat predictable story, using the enormous bird (named Alli) as an evil twin conduit for Tinja’s darkest impulses, fears and even grudges. And they have ample twisted fun with the concept, as the young girl slowly grows aware of her own scores to settle. As Alli starts morphing into a demonic Tinja lookalike — abetted by impressively lean, mean special effects and Jarkko T. Laine’s spine-tingling lensing — Solalinna delivers a terrific double performance as a vulnerable child haunted by parental expectations and her low sense of self-worth. Her inner jealousy erupts, meanwhile, with the arrival of a picture-perfect girl next door, a more accomplished gymnast with a sweet little dog — something Tinja has always desired but been denied by her mother. Suffice to say some blood will be spilled.
Amid the mischievous mayhem that ensues, Bergholm and Rautsi deserve credit for not abandoning Tinja’s mother, giving her a separate storyline involving a closeted extramarital affair — as seen through her daughter’s eyes. While the filmmakers don’t deepen this narrative enough, it generates intrigue nonetheless, suggesting more to Tinja’s unhappy mom and her unspoken desires than meets the eye.
Is it possible that this is indeed the first time she’s found love, like she claims she has? It feels quietly radical to permit nuance and dimension in this pushy-parent figure, beyond her neatly sculpted waves and prickly demeanor. By the time Bergholm’s fairytale-gone-ugly reaches its unhinged finale, it feels like Tinja isn’t the only one coming out of her loveless shell, or confronting the maternal beast within to the point of no return.
Hatching (2022)
Pahanhautoja
Directed by: Hanna Bergholm
Starring: Jani Volanen, Reino Nordin, Siiri Solalinna, Saija Lentonen, Sophia Heikkilä, Stella Leppikorpi, Hertta Nieminen, Aada Punakivi, Jonna Aaltonen, Miroslava Agejeva, Ida Määttänen
Screenplay by: Ilja Rautsi
Cinematography by: Jarkko T. Laine
Film Editing by: Linda Jildmal
Costume Design by: Ulrika Sjölin
Set Decoration by: Mikus Bevalds, Peteris Kalnins, Kristaps Kalsers, Kaspars Kaulins
Art Direction by: Juris Zhukovskis
Music by: Stein Berge Svendsen
MPAA Rating: None.
Distributed by: IFC Midnight (United States)
Release Date: January 23, 2022 (Sundance), April 29, 2022 (United States)
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