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The Hole

  • 2001
  • 12
  • 1h 42m
IMDb RATING
6.2/10
49K
YOUR RATING
The Hole (2001)
Teen DramaDramaMysteryThriller

Four teenagers discover an underground fallout shelter thanks to a friend, who agrees to have them hide there with the door locked for a few days to escape a school trip. Yet, time passes, a... Read allFour teenagers discover an underground fallout shelter thanks to a friend, who agrees to have them hide there with the door locked for a few days to escape a school trip. Yet, time passes, and their friend doesn't come back to get them.Four teenagers discover an underground fallout shelter thanks to a friend, who agrees to have them hide there with the door locked for a few days to escape a school trip. Yet, time passes, and their friend doesn't come back to get them.

  • Director
    • Nick Hamm
  • Writers
    • Guy Burt
    • Ben Court
    • Caroline Ip
  • Stars
    • Thora Birch
    • Desmond Harrington
    • Daniel Brocklebank
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.2/10
    49K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Nick Hamm
    • Writers
      • Guy Burt
      • Ben Court
      • Caroline Ip
    • Stars
      • Thora Birch
      • Desmond Harrington
      • Daniel Brocklebank
    • 280User reviews
    • 45Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 1 win & 3 nominations total

    Photos56

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    Top cast19

    Edit
    Thora Birch
    Thora Birch
    • Liz
    Desmond Harrington
    Desmond Harrington
    • Mike
    Daniel Brocklebank
    Daniel Brocklebank
    • Martin
    Laurence Fox
    Laurence Fox
    • Geoff
    Keira Knightley
    Keira Knightley
    • Frankie
    Embeth Davidtz
    Embeth Davidtz
    • Dr. Philippa Horwood
    Steven Waddington
    Steven Waddington
    • DCS Tom Howard
    Emma Griffiths Malin
    Emma Griffiths Malin
    • Daisy
    Jemma Powell
    Jemma Powell
    • Minnie
    • (as Gemma Powell)
    Gemma Craven
    Gemma Craven
    • Mrs. Dunn
    Anastasia Hille
    Anastasia Hille
    • Gillian
    Kelly Hunter
    Kelly Hunter
    • DI Chapman
    Maria Pastel
    • Policewoman
    Celia Montague
    • Solicitor
    Kevin Trainor
    Kevin Trainor
    • Boy in School
    Lolita Chakrabarti
    Lolita Chakrabarti
    • Doctor
    Claire Fox
    • Reporter
    Jennifer Hockman
    • Reporter
    • Director
      • Nick Hamm
    • Writers
      • Guy Burt
      • Ben Court
      • Caroline Ip
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews280

    6.249.4K
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    Featured reviews

    8mjw2305

    There should be more of these.

    Truly, fresh and new ideas, rarely make it to film. The Hole, based on the novel (after the Hole) by Guy Burt is a good exception to this. It is seldom that we see a top quality thriller, but this movie is well cast, well directed, and works wonderfully. The story is quite simple really, it relies on strong characterisation and good dialogue. All the cast give good performances and Thora Birch is outstanding. This thriller really does keep you on the edge of your seat throughout; it is very dark, very creepy and has a terrifying atmosphere. I would recommend this film to anyone who likes a good thriller. It isn't in the same league as Se7en and Silence of the Lambs, but it is better than most thrillers that are released.

    8/10 A great film.
    6roland-sinn

    Above Average Teen Thriller with Genuine Horror

    The Hole begins slowly and very standardly, but unlike most genre films, it picks up pace after 40 minutes then accelerates towards a smashing ending. Well okay, the ending itself wasn't a great surprise, but I found it satisfying in a B-grade kind of way.

    The premise of Hole is pretty mundane. The idea of a group of teenagers going into an old abandoned building or structure for a lark is a stock standard story opener for hundreds of B-grade horror flicks. But then Hole becomes interesting by the re-telling of events from different characters' individual points of view in a manner reminiscent of the 1950 British gem ‘The Woman in Question'. Just who is telling the truth?

    The final third of Hole rockets along and the film becomes genuinely frightening. I was especially impressed with the way repercussion of actions and in-actions are graphically shown and not glossed over as so many genre films have a habit of doing.

    Hole is not a great film. The acting from the five teenagers is a cut above average, but the direction is pretty heavy handed and not very imaginative. Overall I found Hole a nicely satisfying and genuinely frightening B-grade experience which proves the old adage that says the worst monsters are human beings. It also shows that modern thriller/horror genre films doesn't always have to rely on lashings of special effects and supernaturalism to tell a story effectively.

    6/10
    5stephen.murtagh

    I'd rather be in the Hole than see this again.

    The first trailer for this film showed to be a gruelling film about humans trapped in a dark, confined space, slowly withering away. The second trailer pitched this movie as some sort of repellent formulaic teen horror film. It was the first trailer that had been touted since last autumn in the UK that intrigued me enough to see it.

    Having watched the film I was disappointed as the film failed to deliver what had been promised in either trailer. What I saw was a bland movie that seemingly doesn't know what it's target demographic is. I am assuming that it wanted to be a psychological horror, but the film is so lightweight that it appears to have been written with twelve-year-olds in mind – which isn't necessarily a bad thing. However, the film is visually aimed at adults, with sex, full frontal nudity, nasty violence and drug use. Thus the film is torn between the two camps; the writing is too simple for adults but the adult material will stop kids seeing it.

    Essentially the story is that these toffs at a private boarding school in England would rather spend three days in an old underground World War Two bunker (the titular ‘Hole') than go to Wales on a school trip. Everything is engineered so that the school assumes that they have gone home for the duration whilst their parents think that they have actually gone to Wales. In other words, nobody knows where they are there. Ultimately the events unfold and they end up stuck in the Hole and proceed to go stir crazy.

    My biggest hang up is the presence of Thora Birch. Firstly her twee English accent is all over the place. They should have just let her speak with her natural accent, as it would have been less of a distraction. Maybe as an Englishman this is a stick that I can unfairly beat her with and perhaps overseas no one will notice, but for me it was an unwelcome distraction (especially when there are many young British actresses who would've done a better job).

    Secondly she brings NOTHING to the movie. The other members of the young cast are relative unknowns and act her off the screen. They all give believable reputations of stuck up self-centred kids and the effects of human physical and mental degradation. I assume that Ms. Birch was brought in to add ‘international appeal' but she stifles and flounders around with her leading role, unable to rise to the challenge of her co-stars.

    Before you all assume that I'm bashing her because she's American think again because young American actor Desmond Harrington who plays Mike Steel, is the best thing about this movie.
    6mrpink000

    Lacks depth in plot while Thora Birch's performance is dissapointing, especially after American Beauty and Ghost World...

    The Hole isn't that bad a film, its just that it lacks the components which a good thriller/suspence/mystery should have.

    The Hole, starring Thora Birch, is a suspence/mystery and is about a group of high-school teenagers who become stuck in an old, World War 2 tunnel, called 'the hole'. The group of four decide to camp down in the hole for a few days to wag a school geography camp and have a good time. However, all goes wrong and the four become stuck in the hole for 18 days, deprived of air, food and water.

    The suspence lies in not knowing exactly how they became stuck in the hole and who's to blame for their dire situation. The plot structure is based around Lizzy's escape, while she continues to have flashbacks of the event itself. However, different flashbacks occur at different stages of the film, which leaves the viewer never really knowing the exact truth until the end.

    If you've watched your fare share of suspence type mystery thrillers, then you should be able to sum this movie up pretty quickly and be able to guess basically what's going on. The plot and plot structure arn't terribly original and I never really found myself becomming attached or captivated by what was going on. The film lacks character development and you never really become attached to the characters to the point were you intensely care what's happening to them. Thora Birch's performance is dissapointing and not terribly convincing. She's good, but no where near her brilliance when you compare this performance to her roles in American Beauty and Ghost World.

    The Hole is overall dissapointing and never really draws you in like a good mystery thriller will. I give it 6/10.
    jamesdeanstolemyturkey

    Promising but... what a shame

    I'D RATHER YOU DIDN'T READ THIS IF YOU HAVEN'T ALREADY SEEN IT, JUST IN CASE I SPOIL IT FOR YOU!

    When Liz staggers, tattered, shocked and disturbed in a blood stained coat through the halls of residence in an exclusive British boarding school in the opening scene of the film, which has thus far been intense and atmospheric, I begin thinking - "This is promising." But then, and I don't wish to be known as a pedant or anything, she stumbles up to a British telephone in her British boarding school and calls the British emergency services, saying, in a British falsetto...

    "Nine... one... one."

    WHAT?????????????

    911? The most basic and fundamental of research errors, the number for the police, has been overlooked.

    I know I am watching an American film. Ever since I first saw her in American Beauty (in which she managed to hold her own against Spacey and Boening beautifully. I have found a brilliant allure about her. I so wanted to like this film. And I did. I would have liked it more if it had been a little more culturally sensitive.

    All American-Britons in the film had flawless British accents - but that's just it - a regional dialect here and a glottal stop there would have been far more believable.

    The concept itself is brilliant - a tale of adolescent obsession and peer pressure leading to insanity and homicide. And there are moments in the film that are genuinely disturbing, for example when we see Liz beside her vomiting best friend, ignoring her totally, preferring to obsess about Mike - her teenage fantasy incarnate.

    Technically, the film is superb, and fragmented fast shots of the bodies and effective lighting and mise-en-scene in the Hole itself are brilliant, but everything set in the present is fairly terrible, mostly due to dubious acting and underdeveloped script work. The contrived atmosphere of the first fifty minutes is representative of Liz's tale itself - false, and when we do see the account as it happened, it is shocking and tense (although the cheesy funeral scene is fairly diabolical).

    The biggest problem around the film is the fact that the characters, even Liz, are underdeveloped and the script and issues (eg that of identity, ie belonging - "The be popular at (name of high school), you have to be either..." said by both Martin and Liz) are too. Her obession is a fantastic premise for a film and its context in the hole is excellent but then it is damaged by a throw away attitude to making decent psychological thrillers - in this case, the teen horror genre was too much of an influence (although the grissly death scenes were very effective).

    An excellent idea, but seriously underdeveloped, especially when placed in a market with peers such as Cube, with a lower budget and totally unknown actors (I'm sorry, Thora, I'm sorry!!)which manages to be shocking, timeless and tense.

    Watch it, it's good. But note that its potential was done poorly by using American actors to create a pseudo-Britain, and "American-England," and the sometimes unbelievable dialogue.

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    Related interests

    Molly Ringwald in Breakfast Club (1985)
    Teen Drama
    Mahershala Ali and Alex R. Hibbert in Moonlight (2016)
    Drama
    Jack Nicholson and Faye Dunaway in Chinatown (1974)
    Mystery
    Cho Yeo-jeong in Parasite (2019)
    Thriller

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      In the book, Liz, Alex, Frankie and Jeff were trapped in an abandoned cellar. In the film, Liz, Mike, Geoff and Frankie are trapped in an abandoned underground nuclear fallout shelter.
    • Goofs
      In the downward shot as the four enter the shelter, two legs of the camera's tripod can be seen.
    • Quotes

      Mike: For me, all for me. I killed my best friend, you let me think I was going to die, and you watched me kill my best friend. I killed him for a fucking coke! You let Frankie die! You held her hand and you let her die.

    • Alternate versions
      The film was cut by the distributor to qualify for a "15" rating in the UK. The cuts include the re-dubbing of the word 'cunt'. Ironically, the 'deleted scenes' section on the UK DVD release is rated '18', therefore earning the DVD an '18' overall, even though the film is only a '15'. The same version of the film was released worldwide, so an uncut version/director's cut DVD sadly isn't available anywhere.
    • Connections
      Featured in Empire: The World's Best Movie Quiz (2006)
    • Soundtracks
      Show Me The Money (Jerry Maguire Mix)
      Written by Paul Akabah and Ashley Akabah

      Published by EMI Music Publishing Ltd.

      Performed by Architechs

      Courtesy of Go!Beat/Polydor UK Ltd.

      Licensed by kind permission of The Film & TV Licensing Division, part of the Universal Music Group

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    FAQ19

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    • What is The Hole and what is it about?

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • June 20, 2001 (France)
    • Countries of origin
      • United Kingdom
      • France
      • Canada
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Atrapados
    • Filming locations
      • Royal Grammar School, High Wycombe, Buckinghamshire, England, UK
    • Production companies
      • Canal+
      • Cowboy Films
      • Granada Film Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • £4,158,370 (estimated)
    • Gross worldwide
      • $7,819,851
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 42m(102 min)
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1

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