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The Hole
 
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The Hole (2001)

Starring: Thora Birch, Desmond Harrington Director: Nick Hamm Rating: R (Restricted) Format: DVD
3.4 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (66 customer reviews)

List Price: $9.99
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  • This item: The Hole DVD ~ Thora Birch

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The Hole
77% buy the item featured on this page:
The Hole 3.4 out of 5 stars (66)
$6.99
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Editorial Reviews

Product Description

This suspenseful psychological thriller features hot young stars Thora Birch (GHOST WORLD, AMERICAN BEAUTY), Desmond Harrington (GHOST SHIP), and a hip, edgy cast! When Liz Dunn (Birch) and three of her prep school friends decide to bail on their scheduled weekend field trip and hide in a long-abandoned bomb shelter, they expect to party and hang out. They don't expect someone to lock them in! As anxious hours turn into desperate days, fear and insecurity erupt uncontrollably as their spontaneous adventure turns into a bloody fight for survival! Also starring Keira Knightley (PIRATES OF THE CARIBBEAN: THE CURSE OF THE BLACK PEARL, BEND IT LIKE BECKHAM) and Embeth Davidtz (THE EMPEROR'S CLUB, BRIDGET JONES'S DIARY) -- you'll find yourself bolted to your seat as the electrifying tale unfolds through Liz's tormented eyes!

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66 Reviews
5 star:
 (17)
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 (18)
3 star:
 (12)
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 (10)
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 (9)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
3.4 out of 5 stars (66 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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60 of 67 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Going underground, December 10, 2004
By bonsai chicken (United States) - See all my reviews
As THE HOLE opens, a dirty, dissheveled girl stumbles into town, looking with every step as if she won't make it much further. By the time she finally reaches a phone and dials emergency, she is so traumatized that all she can do is scream.

What we know is this: over holiday, four prep school students decided to have a very private party in an abandoned underground shelter out in the woods. They were down there for eighteen days. But what really happened to them will be revealed gradually over the course of the film as Liz (Thora Birch), the girl from the opening scenes, plays cat and mouse with a psychiatrist (Embeth Davidtz) who is trying to get her to tell her story.

This is a twisty thriller with great acting on all parts. Thora Birch's fake English accent grated on me at first, probably just because I know she's not English, but as the film progressed I didn't notice it so much. It also becomes clear that she was the right choice for this particular role.

The DVD includes director's commentary, in which he talks about sets, censorship, the psychological motivations of the main character, and uses the word "oblique" a lot. It was not exactly lively, but it was moderately interesting. There are also some deleted scenes and an alternate ending. The corpselike image of Keira Knightly on the cover of this release is misleading, as she's hardly the star, though her fans will definitely want to check the film out. (I have seen much more appropriate in-store copies that have Keira and Thora sharing cover space.)
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45 of 50 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Four teenagers locked in an abandoned bomb shelter..., October 21, 2004
By Lawrance M. Bernabo (The Zenith City, Duluth, Minnesota) - See all my reviews
(TOP 10 REVIEWER)    (COMMUNITY FORUM 04)      
Four English prep school students decide to skip a weekend field trip and hide out in an abandoned bomb shelter where they can hang out and party all night long. Sure, this sounds sort of stupid, but these teenagers see it as the best private party of their life, "absolutely extra curricular" as one of them puts it. However, when the weekend is over and the door is supposed to open it does not, and the four find out that they are locked in. Who locked them in? Will they be discovered? Can they find another way out? What will happen when they run out of food and water? How long before they start to turn on each other?

Since the film opens with one of the four stumbling into the deserted school we know that they were down in that hole for eighteen days. However, the expectation that this 2001 film will take us back through those 18 days from start to finish quickly turns out to be a false one. "The Hole" is more of a mystery than a survival drama. The teenager who stumbled into the school, Liz Dunn (Thora Birch), is seeing a psychologist, Dr. Philippa Horwood (Embeth Davidtz), who is trying to find out what happened. Liz tells the story of what happened, but Horwood knows that it is not the truth and that the girl has sanitized it as a way of preserving her sanity. We know the story is not the truth because when the group descends into the bomb shelter director Nick Hamm keeps focusing on a part of the chain ladder that is obviously dangerously week. It plays not part in Liz's story, so we will just have to keep revisiting the story until it does.

In addition to Liz the others in the hole are Mike Steel (Desmond Harrington), the spoiled son of an American rock star whom Liz has a crush on, Frankie Smith (Keira Knightley), Liz's best friend, and Geoff Bingham (Laurence Fox), who really more of Frankie's potential boy toy than actual boyfriend. The quartet are brought to the bomb shelter by Martyn Taylor (Daniel Brocklebank), the male friend of Liz's who wants to be more than a friend. He is the obvious suspect for why the four kids are locked in the hole, especially for DCS Tom Howard (Steven Waddington), but obvious means little in this film.

While the mystery of "what really happened" gets in the way from time to time because since we know Liz's first story is not the truth we have to question everything that comes after that point, there are some horrific moments in this film having to do with being locked in a hole to die. In that regard "The Hole" has a couple of gruesome moments that are going to stick with you, having more of a visceral effect than the blood and gore associated with all the slick money-making Hollywood horror movies (I also have to comment that all the adolescent males who check out this film because they heard Keira Knightley does nudity are going to be disappointed twice, the first time because of brevity and the second because of context). There are also moments of how horrible human beings can be, such as when Liz talks while Frankie is puking her guts out.

"The Hole" makes excellent use of the simple but ominous music by Clint Mansell even before the company credit fades to black and the opening credits are revealed by the trembling, searching beam of a flashlight. I think this film certainly gets you hooked, and how much you like it in the end will depend entirely on your satisfaction with the explanation for why this happened. For me it was just a bit too cute and undercut the horror show aspects, taking us back to an area that has been overdone in such films. But it certainly does have its moments, all of them being in the hole and not back in the real world, and avoids the rampant stupidity that afflicts so many movies in this genre. The result is not great, but it is well above average and for anybody looking for something new to watch to creep them out on Halloween night this year, "The Hole" should not disappoint.
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22 of 24 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Great But Not for Everyone, June 24, 2005
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Caution: Spoilers Ahead!!

I have to credit IMDB for my discovery of this fascinating film, as the number of comments posted about "The Saw" proclaiming it a poor imitation of "The Hole" convinced me to purchase the DVD. Not a particularly hard sell because Thora Birch is rapidly climbing to the top of my most talented actress list; so watch out Mia Kirshner and Sarah Polley.

What I especially like now about this former child actress is her ability to de-tune her sexiness. This allows her to believably-physically play the "plain Jane" to beauties like Scarlett Johansson and Kiera Knightley, while on another level actually being sexier. The appeal of this is that it allows you to imagine that you are the only one in the audience picking up on that other level, thereby making it seem like a exclusive connection.

As has already been much discussed, the trailer for "The Hole" is completely wrong for the movie, making it seem like a slasher film when it a subtle psychological thriller of obsession and misdirection. It illustrates what obsession can produce when taken a step too far. Probably the most chilling scene is the nightclub rest room parody where Liz (Birch) is gleefully prattling on about her seduction of Mike to her girlfriend Frankie (Knightley), utterly oblivious and unconcerned that Frankie is deathly ill.

Another great scene is the one used by the director to set up Liz's friend Martin for the blame, Liz is speaking to Martin about what it is like to love someone but not have them know you exist. Martin says everything with his face as he lets you know that this just how he feels about Liz.

Director Nick Hamm has pieced together a textbook example of misdirection and the ability of filmmakers to show you only what they want you to see. All the flashbacks (and there are a lot) are POV situations with varying degrees of truth. In this regard Hamm is quite respectful of the audience, manipulating the viewer up to a point but then allowing them free rein to invest each development with their own interpretation. Some have found the ending too predictable because it does not have a twist. But twists have become so obligatory that no twist is a twist. Having Liz win in the end and then going out on her eye contact is simply perfect. Not only does this parallel her claim to have finally picked the lock and escaped, it gives the kind off kilter resolution that the film needs for structural unity. If Peyton had won in "The Hand that Rocks the Cradle", that film would have been a classic instead of just another example of a thriller than ultimately falls short.

"The Hole" is really more character study than thriller, and the character of Liz with her obsession and evolving motivations is as compelling as Hitchcock's "Marnie". Liz does not plan the deaths of her schoolmates, she is just desperately going after something and things happen. She gets herself trapped in the situation and just goes with it because after a point she has no way out. The two scenes where Mike cruelly rejects her are riveting as Birch artfully starts to show us that Liz is wrapped a little too tight-something no one expected until that point. After that her character's issues are slowly revealed layer by layer.

It is interesting that even after those rejections, if Mike had just agreed to go with her for pizza, she would not have locked the exit. Ironically, a bit later his tender support of her causes her to postpone unlocking the exit. This kind of on-the-fence waiting to topple structure makes this a cerebral film viewing exercise.

While not normal, Liz is believable. Mike's death disturbs her but on reflection she realizes that it is actually for the best. She was able to get him to fall in love with her but is realistic enough even in her madness to realize that they had no future together. She is pretty much insane after leaving the hole but as she recovers her memory the instinct for self-preservation kicks in.

Then again, what do I know? I'm only a child.
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Most Recent Customer Reviews

3.0 out of 5 stars Average with some redeeming parts
Overall, this was a generally enjoyable, but not outstanding movie. Its set in modern day Britain at an elitish boarding high school. Read more
Published 2 days ago by The Tao of Netflix

2.0 out of 5 stars OK thriller keeps viewers guessing

THE HOLE

(UK/France - 2001)

Aspect ratio: 2.39:1 (Super 35)
Theatrical soundtrack: Dolby Digital

A young girl (Thora Birch) is... Read more
Published 1 month ago by Libretio

4.0 out of 5 stars Very Dark "Hole"
I have to say I was rather impressed with this film...one of those that didn't really appear in theaters that I recall, but that I caught on cable one particularly drab weekend... Read more
Published 7 months ago by M. Spencer

5.0 out of 5 stars When Control Trumps Life...
Liz Dunn (the magnificent Thora Birch!) is the only survivor of a group of prep-school kids' secret gone horribly wrong. The four (including the delectible Keira Knightly! Read more
Published 7 months ago by Bindy Sue Frønkünschtein

5.0 out of 5 stars The Hole
DVD was a little unsettling.
DVD arrived in a very timely fashion.
DVD arrived in excellent condition.
Published 8 months ago by Matthew Reichel

4.0 out of 5 stars 3 stars out of 4
The Bottom Line:

Though never released stateside, The Hole is a succesfully off-putting and claustrophobic tale that takes a nightmarish scenario to a fitting... Read more
Published 9 months ago by One-Line Film Reviews

5.0 out of 5 stars Awesome movie!
This ia a great movie and I would definetly recommend that you go out and buy it! Keira is hot, and even though she is not the main character you see enough of her. Read more
Published 10 months ago by Desiree Marcy

1.0 out of 5 stars I am not the only one this was terrible
I watched this movie with my wife, I expected a really great horror movie...my error. The first mistake, It wasn't a horror despite Amazon's grouping. Read more
Published 12 months ago by D. A. Wade

5.0 out of 5 stars interesting
interesting this movie is. you'll find yourself CONSTANTLY saying "why did she do that?!" or "why did he do that?!"... Read more
Published 12 months ago by Lisa Kart

4.0 out of 5 stars Well-directed psychological thriller
"The Hole" is an interesting psychological thriller that revolves around a teen from a British prep school, Liz Dunn [Thora Birch] who is the sole survivor of a horrible tragedy... Read more
Published 14 months ago by z hayes

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