Thomas Vinterberg's "The Hunt" is not an easy film to watch. The narration of the film is simple and straight like its title but it’s the furtive layers of storytelling which makes it one of the best films of 2013 and a contender for the Oscars.
The story is about the kindergarten worker who is wrongly accused of licentious actions with the children of kindergarten. "The Hunt" had some very uncomfortable questions for me, it seems simple but has a bunch of questions hunting you.
Alfred Hitchock is a master, he knows how to shoot a scene to bring the maximum effect to it. Hitchcock's "Wrong Man" distantly has a similar theme where a guy is wrongly accused of committing a crime, Hitchcock brings all the minute emotions of thrill, the viewer would have some default sympathy for Henry Fonda. But, “The Hunt” hardly brings the emotions of thrill but it efficaciously accumulates the emotions of compassion and the hard sense of feeling for the tragic events which had to be faced by Lucas played by Mads Mikkelsen.
Jim Emerson referring to Paul Thomas Anderson's film "The Master" wrote:
"Just because we notice something in a film doesn't mean it has to be intentional; the important thing is that it's there. It's the work we respond to, because that's all we have; we can never know the intentions behind it for certain -- and maybe the artist doesn't, either. That's the way humans are wired."
You may refer to this quote to the first line of this post where i said: "The Hunt" is not an easy film to watch