During the bright Nordic summer, a group of children reveal their dark and mysterious powers when the adults aren't looking. In this original and gripping supernatural thriller, playtime tak... Read allDuring the bright Nordic summer, a group of children reveal their dark and mysterious powers when the adults aren't looking. In this original and gripping supernatural thriller, playtime takes a dangerous turn.During the bright Nordic summer, a group of children reveal their dark and mysterious powers when the adults aren't looking. In this original and gripping supernatural thriller, playtime takes a dangerous turn.
- Awards
- 16 wins & 17 nominations total
Rakel Lenora Petersen Fløttum
- Ida
- (as Rakel Lenora Fløttum)
Nor Erik Vaagland Torgersen
- 14-year-old
- (as Nor Vaagland Torgersen)
Georg Grøttjord-Glenne
- Boy whose leg breaks
- (as Georg Grøttjord Glenne)
Mina Stavdal
- Teen girl
- (as Mina Elise Stavdal)
- Director
- Writer
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
-1 as movie script needed more elements for its long 2 hours run .
Good cast , mostly good direction, good cinematography.
Some will think this movie is crap but lover of europeen movies will probably like it a lot, i did. Just dont expect much with horror expostion, special effects.
Very reccomended wt subtitles, not many lines of dialogues.
Good cast , mostly good direction, good cinematography.
Some will think this movie is crap but lover of europeen movies will probably like it a lot, i did. Just dont expect much with horror expostion, special effects.
Very reccomended wt subtitles, not many lines of dialogues.
Wow, damn. What a way to end this year of horror. Absolutely loved this. Great performances, good direction, creepy kids, bloody, scary, unafraid to shock. A bit too slow but I feel that was absolutely necessary for this story.
Drenched in dark, dreadful & foreboding atmosphere and steered by terrific performances from its young cast, The Innocents (De uskyldige) is slow, patient & measured in its approach but the tension & terror it invokes from its ominous build-up & gradually intensifying drama is unnerving & unsettling in suffocating doses, and ranks amongst the most gripping, absorbing & disturbing examples of its kind.
Written & directed by Eskil Vogt, the premise takes its time to set up and character introductions are proper yet there is this feeling of uneasy apprehension that pervades the air & is perceivable from early moments. And it only heightens as the plot progresses once what started as four kids exploring their mysterious powers takes a dangerous turn. And from thereon, the picture has our attention within its grasp.
Assisting the story in sustaining its chilling vibe & disquieting tone is the menacing camerawork, brooding score, slow-burn pace & sudden violence while the young actors play their respective parts with deft composure and are highly convincing in their roles. Their credible input is a vital ingredient that makes this drama work and these children navigate & articulate all the required emotions with surprising authenticity.
Overall, The Innocents addresses themes of friendship, loneliness, morality, cruelty, curiosity & loss of innocence through the bonding they forge and the hidden powers they discover in each other's presence. Unrelenting in its mood & smothering in its intensity, this Norwegian chiller is as uncomfortable as it is uncanny, never allows the suspense to leave the room and concludes with a haunting finale that lingers long after the credits roll.
Written & directed by Eskil Vogt, the premise takes its time to set up and character introductions are proper yet there is this feeling of uneasy apprehension that pervades the air & is perceivable from early moments. And it only heightens as the plot progresses once what started as four kids exploring their mysterious powers takes a dangerous turn. And from thereon, the picture has our attention within its grasp.
Assisting the story in sustaining its chilling vibe & disquieting tone is the menacing camerawork, brooding score, slow-burn pace & sudden violence while the young actors play their respective parts with deft composure and are highly convincing in their roles. Their credible input is a vital ingredient that makes this drama work and these children navigate & articulate all the required emotions with surprising authenticity.
Overall, The Innocents addresses themes of friendship, loneliness, morality, cruelty, curiosity & loss of innocence through the bonding they forge and the hidden powers they discover in each other's presence. Unrelenting in its mood & smothering in its intensity, this Norwegian chiller is as uncomfortable as it is uncanny, never allows the suspense to leave the room and concludes with a haunting finale that lingers long after the credits roll.
It took me a while to decide whether I liked it or not. I guess it's one of those movies that are just... fine. I don't feel like I wasted my time but it didn't leave me thinking "what a great movie" either.
De uskyldige (The Innocents) is an atmospheric, nicely shot slow burner that ultimately fails to justify its demanding 117-minute running time. The first half is quite slow, with little narrative substance and virtually no dialogue - just children being mean and creepy - so that by the end of the first hour it begins to drag. The pace eventually picks up over the last 40 minutes, which are delightfully tense and suspenseful and manage to keep you on the edge of your seat with some great spooky (and gruesome) scenes, but at this point it feels like too little too late. Nice cinematography and sound that enhance the eerie overtone of the movie; the kids' acting is excellent.
Overall, a nice suspense/supernatural flick with a nordic vibe going on (one can't help but think of von Trier's similar nordic oddity Riget). I just think it could have used a bit more plot and a shorter runtime.
De uskyldige (The Innocents) is an atmospheric, nicely shot slow burner that ultimately fails to justify its demanding 117-minute running time. The first half is quite slow, with little narrative substance and virtually no dialogue - just children being mean and creepy - so that by the end of the first hour it begins to drag. The pace eventually picks up over the last 40 minutes, which are delightfully tense and suspenseful and manage to keep you on the edge of your seat with some great spooky (and gruesome) scenes, but at this point it feels like too little too late. Nice cinematography and sound that enhance the eerie overtone of the movie; the kids' acting is excellent.
Overall, a nice suspense/supernatural flick with a nordic vibe going on (one can't help but think of von Trier's similar nordic oddity Riget). I just think it could have used a bit more plot and a shorter runtime.
The Innocents follows four children who become friends during the summer holidays. Out of sight of the adults, they discover they have hidden powers. While exploring their newfound abilities in the nearby forests and playgrounds, their innocent play takes a dark turn and strange things begin to happen.
Even though a vast majority of the film's most crucial elements take place out of sight of the adults, The Innocents is a look at the various methods of parental nurturing and fostering the ability for the children to become their best selves. Three vastly disparate families with different ethnicities, backgrounds, and social situations yields an environment for conflicting approaches to the kid's newfound abilities. For every groan and eyeroll for a superhero movie that spouts about the responsibility that great power brings, this film is a direct response to what happens when power is bestowed upon people too young to fully comprehend its capacity and potential. The Innocents is a story about exactly that; the loss of innocence as unchecked power is given an environment to manifest and fester, and the unfortunate consequences that follow.
Starring Rakel Lenora Fløttum, The Innocents starts as an analysis of Ida, a girl moving with her family to a new town. The idea of neglect is the central issue as the audience is privy to Ida's treatment of her older sister Anna (Ramstad), who lives with autism, demanding more care and attention from their parents. Fløttum as Ida is an absolute nightmare of a kid, inflicting any number of horrible acts upon her unsuspecting sister and her streak of cruelty is shown time and again. Fløttum delivers a magnificent performance that takes a full arc throughout the course of the film with a wide array of conflicting emotions that play out in both verbal and nonverbal cues. Ben, the first new kid she meets played by Sam Ashraf, veers in the opposite trajectory as Ida; after the initial bond is created, it's clear to see that the same dark current of cruelty Ida possesses also runs through Ben yet stemming from different circumstances. Ashraf is brilliant as the tortured young boy; with cold eyes and a colder demeanor, Ben's menace is possibly the creepiest aspect of the film.
Also starring Alva Brynsmo Ramstad as Anna, Ida's sister, the actress tasked with the hardest role in the film: playing a non-verbal autistic character who slowly comes into her own as the kid's powers develop. While a neurotypical actress to play an autistic character could be seen as problematic, Vogt handles the characterization deftly, making sure Ramstad doesn't veer into a cliche of the illness, a la Dustin Hoffman in Rain Man. With the material she's given, and the direction from Vogt, Ramstad turns in a stellar performance, transitioning into an awakening and awareness that is both stirring and heartbreaking. Rounding out the cast of kids that gain these strange powers is Aisha, played by Mina Yasmin Bremseth Asheim, who spends most of her time communing with Anna. Asheim, possibly the youngest, but by far the wisest of the group, is an old soul stuck in a young person's body. Asheim plays the role with an extreme clarity, the heart of the group that is the first to push back against Ben's whims. Aisha's bond with Anna is one of the sweetest aspects of the movie, facilitating not just a change in Anna but also a change in Ida's relationship with Anna.
Directed by Eskil Vogt, who spent a majority of his career co-writing movies with director Joachim Trier (to include the 2021 darling The Worst Person in the World), The Innocents marks Vogt's shift into directing for himself. Starting with this simple, well thought out low-stakes film, Vogt shows a keen eye for mood and atmosphere, pulling incredibly haunting performances from his cast of young children. From a writing standpoint, Vogt's ability to knit three different familial stories into an overarching theme of being a product of environment is subtly and superbly handled. Directing wise, the filmmaker appears nearly fully formed after spending the better part of two decades with Trier, an accomplished director in his own right. Here, Vogt manages to unravel the supernatural mystery with a pacing that keeps the viewer on the hook to find out who will be left standing at the film's end.
Overall, The Innocents is one of the more sinister movies to be released in the United States this year. The unsettling creepiness Vogt manages to convey compliments the equally creepy performances from the actors. With clean, often visually arresting cinematography, sensible low budget effects, and a quiet, thoughtful examination of the nature of family, the movie is a quiet gem hidden amongst the raucous, explosion filled blockbusters that rule the summer.
Even though a vast majority of the film's most crucial elements take place out of sight of the adults, The Innocents is a look at the various methods of parental nurturing and fostering the ability for the children to become their best selves. Three vastly disparate families with different ethnicities, backgrounds, and social situations yields an environment for conflicting approaches to the kid's newfound abilities. For every groan and eyeroll for a superhero movie that spouts about the responsibility that great power brings, this film is a direct response to what happens when power is bestowed upon people too young to fully comprehend its capacity and potential. The Innocents is a story about exactly that; the loss of innocence as unchecked power is given an environment to manifest and fester, and the unfortunate consequences that follow.
Starring Rakel Lenora Fløttum, The Innocents starts as an analysis of Ida, a girl moving with her family to a new town. The idea of neglect is the central issue as the audience is privy to Ida's treatment of her older sister Anna (Ramstad), who lives with autism, demanding more care and attention from their parents. Fløttum as Ida is an absolute nightmare of a kid, inflicting any number of horrible acts upon her unsuspecting sister and her streak of cruelty is shown time and again. Fløttum delivers a magnificent performance that takes a full arc throughout the course of the film with a wide array of conflicting emotions that play out in both verbal and nonverbal cues. Ben, the first new kid she meets played by Sam Ashraf, veers in the opposite trajectory as Ida; after the initial bond is created, it's clear to see that the same dark current of cruelty Ida possesses also runs through Ben yet stemming from different circumstances. Ashraf is brilliant as the tortured young boy; with cold eyes and a colder demeanor, Ben's menace is possibly the creepiest aspect of the film.
Also starring Alva Brynsmo Ramstad as Anna, Ida's sister, the actress tasked with the hardest role in the film: playing a non-verbal autistic character who slowly comes into her own as the kid's powers develop. While a neurotypical actress to play an autistic character could be seen as problematic, Vogt handles the characterization deftly, making sure Ramstad doesn't veer into a cliche of the illness, a la Dustin Hoffman in Rain Man. With the material she's given, and the direction from Vogt, Ramstad turns in a stellar performance, transitioning into an awakening and awareness that is both stirring and heartbreaking. Rounding out the cast of kids that gain these strange powers is Aisha, played by Mina Yasmin Bremseth Asheim, who spends most of her time communing with Anna. Asheim, possibly the youngest, but by far the wisest of the group, is an old soul stuck in a young person's body. Asheim plays the role with an extreme clarity, the heart of the group that is the first to push back against Ben's whims. Aisha's bond with Anna is one of the sweetest aspects of the movie, facilitating not just a change in Anna but also a change in Ida's relationship with Anna.
Directed by Eskil Vogt, who spent a majority of his career co-writing movies with director Joachim Trier (to include the 2021 darling The Worst Person in the World), The Innocents marks Vogt's shift into directing for himself. Starting with this simple, well thought out low-stakes film, Vogt shows a keen eye for mood and atmosphere, pulling incredibly haunting performances from his cast of young children. From a writing standpoint, Vogt's ability to knit three different familial stories into an overarching theme of being a product of environment is subtly and superbly handled. Directing wise, the filmmaker appears nearly fully formed after spending the better part of two decades with Trier, an accomplished director in his own right. Here, Vogt manages to unravel the supernatural mystery with a pacing that keeps the viewer on the hook to find out who will be left standing at the film's end.
Overall, The Innocents is one of the more sinister movies to be released in the United States this year. The unsettling creepiness Vogt manages to convey compliments the equally creepy performances from the actors. With clean, often visually arresting cinematography, sensible low budget effects, and a quiet, thoughtful examination of the nature of family, the movie is a quiet gem hidden amongst the raucous, explosion filled blockbusters that rule the summer.
Did you know
- TriviaEllen Dorrit Petersen , who plays Ida's mum Henriette, and Rakel Lenora Petersen Fløttum, who plays Ida, are also mother and daughter in real life.
- Crazy creditsThe end credits crawl from top to bottom instead of the usual bottom to top.
- ConnectionsFeatured in Horrible Reviews: The Horrors Of 2022: The Innocents Video review (2022)
- How long is The Innocents?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Release date
- Countries of origin
- Official site
- Language
- Also known as
- Juegos Inocentes
- Filming locations
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
- Gross US & Canada
- $30,053
- Opening weekend US & Canada
- $12,330
- May 15, 2022
- Gross worldwide
- $321,757
- Runtime1 hour 57 minutes
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 2.40 : 1
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