It’s raised at the film’s start but only sporadically used in the film. Hunted should have leaned harder into the connection between women and nature that exists in almost all folklore. A sequence that also features a plot twist that while unexpected and ghoulish, is one of the most unbelievable things I’ve seen in a while. Paronnaud and Pernollet also muddy that message with a sequence involving the mother and son from the opening. That’s also about when she apparently slips into insanity. It’s not until the last third of the film that Eve becomes a force to be reckoned with. The script doesn’t change the way the story is told, time has changed how it’s perceived.Īs a female empowerment film Hunted is also a bit lacking. Her red jacket would be seen as a sign she was a “scarlet woman”. It would have been Eve’s fault for leaving the bar with her attacker. You could have made this exact same film in the 70s or 80s and it would have been taken as a warning to women about the perils of going home with strangers and one night stands. The thing is, for all Hunted wants to make points about misogyny and violence against women those messages are a matter of perception and culture. Needless to say the two were working together and she soon ends up in the trunk of their car. She’s almost immediately hit on by a creep (Ciaran O’Brien, The Boy from Mercury, Ripper Street) who is chased off by, and this is how he’s referred to in the credits The Guy (Arieh Worthalter, The Take). Frustrated she heads to a club, leaving her phone at home. It’s not the first time this has been done, is it one of the better versions?Įve (Lucie Debay, The Barefoot Emperor) has had a shitty day at work and her boyfriend (?) Alex keeps calling her. It’s Little Red Riding Hood, updated and given some modern themes. Pickering), serve notice from the start that their film is one also. By doing so, Oscar nominated director Vincent Paronnaud (Persepolis, Asylum: Twisted Horror and Fantasy Tales) and co-writer Léa Pernollet, (English dialogue/translation is credited to David H. Hunted begins with a mother (Simone Milsdotcher) telling her son (Ryan Brodie) a fairy tale about the forest they’re in protecting a woman from those who would do her harm.
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