CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
6.2/10
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TU CALIFICACIÓN
Una joven gimnasta que intenta desesperadamente complacer a su exigente madre, descubre un extraño huevo. Ella lo esconde y lo mantiene caliente, pero cuando sale del cascarón, lo que emerge... Leer todoUna joven gimnasta que intenta desesperadamente complacer a su exigente madre, descubre un extraño huevo. Ella lo esconde y lo mantiene caliente, pero cuando sale del cascarón, lo que emerge los sorprende a todos.Una joven gimnasta que intenta desesperadamente complacer a su exigente madre, descubre un extraño huevo. Ella lo esconde y lo mantiene caliente, pero cuando sale del cascarón, lo que emerge los sorprende a todos.
- Dirección
- Guionistas
- Elenco
- Premios
- 6 premios ganados y 11 nominaciones en total
- Dirección
- Guionistas
- Todo el elenco y el equipo
- Producción, taquilla y más en IMDbPro
Opiniones destacadas
Hatching (2022) is a Finnish Horror movie my wife and I caught in theatres this weekend. The storyline follows a little girl who finds a unique crow and it's egg and decides to bring the egg home and nurture it through birth. She would never guess what comes out of the egg... Meanwhile her parents are going through a divorce and there's troubles at home.
This movie is directed by Hanna Bergholm in her directorial debut and stars Sophia Heikkilä (Invisible Heroes), Jani Volanen (Rumble), Oiva Ollila and Siiri Solalinna.
The storyline for this is very creative and unique. The characters are very well cast and the mother is portrayed perfectly by Heikkilä. The little girl was a bit annoying at times, but there's so much to like about this movie. The creature evolves well over time and they use great special effects to make it happen. The feeding scenes were ultra gross and hard for me to watch. The use of sound effects were excellent and made me cringe in many scenes. There's also some really good jump scenes and sequences that make you uncomfortable. There's a lot going on in this movie.
This is a fresh entry into the horror genre that I would consider a must see. I'd score this a 7/10 and strongly recommend it.
This movie is directed by Hanna Bergholm in her directorial debut and stars Sophia Heikkilä (Invisible Heroes), Jani Volanen (Rumble), Oiva Ollila and Siiri Solalinna.
The storyline for this is very creative and unique. The characters are very well cast and the mother is portrayed perfectly by Heikkilä. The little girl was a bit annoying at times, but there's so much to like about this movie. The creature evolves well over time and they use great special effects to make it happen. The feeding scenes were ultra gross and hard for me to watch. The use of sound effects were excellent and made me cringe in many scenes. There's also some really good jump scenes and sequences that make you uncomfortable. There's a lot going on in this movie.
This is a fresh entry into the horror genre that I would consider a must see. I'd score this a 7/10 and strongly recommend it.
Interesting, ambitious, creative, weird, and well-made but something just didn't sit right for me. My favorite part was the wallpaper in the girl's room. This wasn't scary but it was gross in a body horror and lots of vomit way. Overall, this was just okay.
Greetings again from the darkness. The exceptionally creepy creature leads us to believe this could be a terrific new addition to the creature feature genre. However, director Hanna Bergholm and screenwriter Ilja Rautsi expend so much time and energy on the metaphor aspect that we feel a bit bludgeoned by the end. Despite some wonderful horror elements, we find ourselves thinking, 'alright, already ... just stick with the creepy stuff!'
We open in a beautiful home with pristine design features, where a beautiful mother (Sophia Heikkila) is filming her beautiful family for her vlog, appropriately titled "Lovely Everyday Life." Of course, we all know what happens to perfect little families in movies - the façade cracks. We get our first taste of beautiful mother's not-so-beautiful true nature as she deals with the crow that flies in through an open window and destroys some of the beautiful decorations displayed in the home. Things get interesting when Tinja (a superb Siiri Solalinna), the 12-year-old gymnast daughter, recovers an egg from the intrusive bird's nest and "mothers" it until the egg (the metaphorical façade) cracks open after growing to an enormous size. Out pops a bizarre looking "baby" bird that Tinja names Alli, after the song her family sings.
It doesn't take long for Tinja (and us) to figure out what's happening. The bird not only assumes Tinja is her mother, but it also takes on the emotions that Tinja keeps bottled up inside so as to not upset her overly-demanding mother. See, mom is a former skater and projects her dreams of glory onto her daughter through gymnastics. We never even get the impression that Tinja enjoys the sport, and it's likely she does it because that's the only closeness she gets from dear old mom ... especially when compared to her little brother Mattias (Oiva Ollila) or dad (Jani Volanen). In fact, mom is so dominant over dad, that she's taken on a side lover in handyman Tero (Reino Nordin), who she admits to loving in yet another inappropriate moment with Tinja.
Soon the bird is acting out Tinja's private thoughts to extremes (a true monster in the closet), and no one is really safe. There are some creepy elements that tell us an excellent horror-comedy is in there somewhere. Watching Tinja sponge-bathe the creature and the replicant effects are both imaginative. Ms. Bergholm's film premiered at Sundance, and if anything, it's just a bit too ambitious with the metaphors. We can view this as a coming-of-age story for Tinja as she breaks the shackles of childhood for more independent thinking. And the most obvious interpretation is that of a mother so obsessed with perfection - especially as to how her family is presented to the outside world - that it requires an ugly incident (bird) as a dose of reality. This is clearly commentary on social media and how some become so committed to presenting and maintaining a certain image. As a horror-comedy, the film from Finland offers neither jump-scares nor laugh-outloud moments, but there is enough here for a decent midnight offering.
We open in a beautiful home with pristine design features, where a beautiful mother (Sophia Heikkila) is filming her beautiful family for her vlog, appropriately titled "Lovely Everyday Life." Of course, we all know what happens to perfect little families in movies - the façade cracks. We get our first taste of beautiful mother's not-so-beautiful true nature as she deals with the crow that flies in through an open window and destroys some of the beautiful decorations displayed in the home. Things get interesting when Tinja (a superb Siiri Solalinna), the 12-year-old gymnast daughter, recovers an egg from the intrusive bird's nest and "mothers" it until the egg (the metaphorical façade) cracks open after growing to an enormous size. Out pops a bizarre looking "baby" bird that Tinja names Alli, after the song her family sings.
It doesn't take long for Tinja (and us) to figure out what's happening. The bird not only assumes Tinja is her mother, but it also takes on the emotions that Tinja keeps bottled up inside so as to not upset her overly-demanding mother. See, mom is a former skater and projects her dreams of glory onto her daughter through gymnastics. We never even get the impression that Tinja enjoys the sport, and it's likely she does it because that's the only closeness she gets from dear old mom ... especially when compared to her little brother Mattias (Oiva Ollila) or dad (Jani Volanen). In fact, mom is so dominant over dad, that she's taken on a side lover in handyman Tero (Reino Nordin), who she admits to loving in yet another inappropriate moment with Tinja.
Soon the bird is acting out Tinja's private thoughts to extremes (a true monster in the closet), and no one is really safe. There are some creepy elements that tell us an excellent horror-comedy is in there somewhere. Watching Tinja sponge-bathe the creature and the replicant effects are both imaginative. Ms. Bergholm's film premiered at Sundance, and if anything, it's just a bit too ambitious with the metaphors. We can view this as a coming-of-age story for Tinja as she breaks the shackles of childhood for more independent thinking. And the most obvious interpretation is that of a mother so obsessed with perfection - especially as to how her family is presented to the outside world - that it requires an ugly incident (bird) as a dose of reality. This is clearly commentary on social media and how some become so committed to presenting and maintaining a certain image. As a horror-comedy, the film from Finland offers neither jump-scares nor laugh-outloud moments, but there is enough here for a decent midnight offering.
This was quite an interesting watch. The story slhas a compelling social commentary and there are a lot of themes in this allegory that are pretty heavy to take on. It's very impressive to think that this is the first film for the director as well as the main actor who plays the lead. While most of the cast play their odd roles well, the girl who plays Tinja was so good - she really makes you feel for her.
Aside from the undertones, the horror in this film was pretty bonkers. It tows the line between ridiculous and disturbing a little shakily but you're never bored.
I overall felt like the narrative bit a little more off than it can chew in all the things it was trying to tackle but maybe the ambiguity was the point. This film didn't awe me to the level that it did others but I certainly thought it was a unique one definitely worth a watch for horror fans.
Aside from the undertones, the horror in this film was pretty bonkers. It tows the line between ridiculous and disturbing a little shakily but you're never bored.
I overall felt like the narrative bit a little more off than it can chew in all the things it was trying to tackle but maybe the ambiguity was the point. This film didn't awe me to the level that it did others but I certainly thought it was a unique one definitely worth a watch for horror fans.
This warped fairy tale from Finland hits the ground running with a wonderful opening scene that really sets the tone.
A perfect family (husband, wife, young son and daughter) enjoys a perfect moment in the perfect living room of their perfect home.
But then, an uninvited guest makes an appearance.
Like a Poe-esque harbinger of doom, a jet black raven swoops in through an open window and destroys this idyllic tableau of domestic bliss.
And then things get really strange.
Hatching is essentially a coming-of-age story, a little like ET, if it was directed by Ari Aster instead of Steven Spielberg.
With great performances by Sophia Heikkila as the selfie-stick wielding stage mom and her long suffering daughter, played by Sirii Solalinna, this is a very promising debut feature from Hanna Bergholm.
Uncanny, unsettling and unpredictable.
A perfect family (husband, wife, young son and daughter) enjoys a perfect moment in the perfect living room of their perfect home.
But then, an uninvited guest makes an appearance.
Like a Poe-esque harbinger of doom, a jet black raven swoops in through an open window and destroys this idyllic tableau of domestic bliss.
And then things get really strange.
Hatching is essentially a coming-of-age story, a little like ET, if it was directed by Ari Aster instead of Steven Spielberg.
With great performances by Sophia Heikkila as the selfie-stick wielding stage mom and her long suffering daughter, played by Sirii Solalinna, this is a very promising debut feature from Hanna Bergholm.
Uncanny, unsettling and unpredictable.
¿Sabías que…?
- TriviaDebut role for Siiri Solalinna.
- ErroresAfter extensive gymnastics exercise (at about 17:38) a left hand is shown as very sore. Some day later (at about 27:00) when water is splashed from a bathtub the left hand looks perfectly fine.
- ConexionesFeatured in WatchMojo: Top 10 Best Horror Movies of 2022 (2022)
- Bandas sonorasAa-aa Allin lasta
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- How long is Hatching?Con tecnología de Alexa
Detalles
Taquilla
- Presupuesto
- EUR 3,954,376 (estimado)
- Total en EE. UU. y Canadá
- USD 182,925
- Fin de semana de estreno en EE. UU. y Canadá
- USD 120,209
- 1 may 2022
- Total a nivel mundial
- USD 508,211
- Tiempo de ejecución1 hora 31 minutos
- Color
- Relación de aspecto
- 1.85 : 1
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