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The Hole in the Ground.
Enthralling … The Hole in the Ground. Photograph: Allstar/A24
Enthralling … The Hole in the Ground. Photograph: Allstar/A24

The Hole in the Ground review – superbly scary country horror

This article is more than 5 years old

Mounting weirdness descends as a mother and young son set up home in the middle of a dark and sinister forest

Here’s an Irish folk-horror that clearly drew the right conclusions from the midnight-movie pairing of The Babadook and Under the Shadow: a film operating at a suspenseful, spider-like creep that allows it to skirt your defences and get some distance under the skin.

It opens with a broadly familiar set-up. Recently separated, subtly scarred Sarah (Seána Kerslake) installs herself and young son Chris (James Quinn Markey) in the kind of countryside fixer-upper-type property that conventionally serves as a magnet for trouble. Yet its foundations are undermined in unexpected fashion, first by the discovery of a vast sinkhole in the surrounding forest, then by the neighbourhood crone (Kaurismäki regular Kati Outinen) who pauses her catatonic murmuring to insist that Chris isn’t who he seems. As Sarah briefs one confidante: “It’s been a funny few days.”

The bathos in that aside testifies to the care director Lee Cronin and co-writer Stephen Shields take to describe a semi-functional household against which the mounting weirdness can be more starkly defined. It’s there in the way Sarah strips wallpaper with a kitchen spatula, and Chris’s rejection of parmesan as “dust cheese”; it’s there again in the appearance of James Cosmo, bringing his usual stout Celtic solidity to bear in the role of Outinen’s desperate-distraught spouse.

For a good, enthralling hour, we’re uncertain whether the real threat facing this household comes from within or without. The sinkhole is a nifty feat of VFX that exerts a strange pull, but there’s also the curious cuckoo-in-the-nest business – and young Markey was surely cast for his uncanny resemblances to Sixth Sense-era Haley Joel Osment and The Shining’s Danny Lloyd.

Cronin sometimes leans a little heavily on the Kubrickisms – Sarah tempts fate on repapering the hall with a pattern recalling the Overlook’s carpets – but transcends mere homage by providing us with the resources to invest in these characters.

The terrific Kerslake gives an anchoring performance, suggesting a slightly young-seeming mother beginning to question the evidence of her own tranquilliser-heavy eyes and having to trust her instincts anew. It’s a film in animated conversation with genre history – even a casual survey of that sinkhole might discern traces of Carrie White’s corpse, The Descent’s doomed spelunkers and the victims of The Vanishing. Yet it always finds new, invariably cinematic ways to nudge us towards its final leap into the abyss. Cronin feels like a real find for our especially insecure moment.

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