Them (Ils)

Them (Ils)

63% Liked It
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Them (Ils)

Adriana Mocca, Camelia Maxim, Maria Roman, Michael Cohen, Olivia Bonamy

Clémentine teaches at the French Lycée in Bucharest. Lucas is a novelist. The young couple lives happily in the middle of a forest. But tonight, their lives will be turned upside down. They don't know...( read more  read more... ) it yet but they're being spied upon; they're being surrounded. When night falls, Clémentine and Lucas will come up against THEM. They are here, they are there, they are everywhere--they are even in their home. Who are they? What do they want? The answers will take them to the very limits of fear itself.

Id: 10852077

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Recent Reviews


  • May 26, 2009
    Them is a low-key, low-budget suspense thriller from France that strives to tap into the current mind-set of contemporary horror cinema, post-Blair Witch, by opening with a spurious "based on actual events" caption that brings to mind the similarly counterfeit claims made by film...( read more)s such as Hostel, Wolf Creek and the big-budget Hollywood remakes of The Texas Chain Saw Massacre and The Hills Have Eyes. We know by now that these statements are cynical and exploitative attempts to get people talking, and to also give a greater sense of dramatic worth to a genre that can quite often become bogged down in a mire of predictability and cliché.

    That said the film is far superior to any of the films aforementioned, mostly because of the fact that it jettisons blood and guts in favour of subtle shocks and an anxious atmosphere of foreboding dread. Really, it's quite a refreshing change, especially considering the fact that REAL horror isn't about what you see, but what you don't see; a notion that is best exemplified by the pre-credit sequence in which a mother and her teenage daughter stall their car on a lonely stretch of country lane and are fittingly attacked by an unseen foe that emerges from the darkened woodland surroundings like a ghost! It's really an amazing sequence of pure tension, and one that sets up the central threat of the narrative before we're even introduced to the hero and heroine who will feature throughout the subsequent 60-odd minutes of drama (the film is a slender 78 minutes long in total).

    So, despite the average rating (we'll come to that later), I must admit that for the most part I found this the film to be incredibly effective; with the bare-bones of the plot focusing on a thirty-something teacher and her struggling-writer boyfriend secluded at a remote and run-down mansion just outside of Bucharest. One evening, the couple are woken by the sound of activity coming from the grounds of the house and when they go out to investigate; they discover their car being stolen by an unseen assailant. The couple immediately phone the police - and can't get through to their messaging service (WTF?) - but it's really only a matter of time before the echoing sounds of footsteps clomping, doors being rattled and bizarre and threatening alien-like noises return and begin to penetrate the deathly silence of night.

    I suppose if you wanted to make comparisons, then Them is fairly close in tone to films like that other French horror thriller, High Tension (Switchblade Romance here in the UK) and Michael Haneke's po-faced home-invasion-themed satire Funny Games, with the odd nod to Last House on the Left, Panic Room and The Great Ecstasy of Robert Carmichael. The filmmakers effectively utilise their low-budget by staging much of the film in a single location and with only the two principal actors, with the antagonists going unseen for at least 90% of the film (again, this proves the rule that the scariest stuff is the stuff you never see, which is further proved by the laughable moments that happen towards the end).

    Here is where my problem with the film begins; with the last ten minutes introducing something of a plot-twist (although I'm not quite sure it's as obvious as that) that for me rendered much of the proceeding action farcical and highly unbelievable. It also makes us question the decisions made by our two protagonists, with fear and the survival instinct being replaced by blind stupidity. I don't want to give too much away, but the initial theft of the car takes place (according to the digital clock in the bedroom) at 3:45 am. For me, it would have made more sense to lock myself in the bathroom with a heavy object placed behind the door and wait there with a collection of kitchen knives until the early hours of daylight; rather than running off into the darkened woodland as we see here. There was also another aspect of the film that bothered me slightly (something fairly rife in contemporary horror/suspense cinema) but I won't go into it here (for obvious reasons).

    These flaws (call them plot holes or implausibility's if you must) kind of spoiled the overall flow of this film for me, which is a great shame, as for the most part this was a five star thriller. I don't even mind the ideas suggested by the final plot reveal, but rather the way it seems tacked on in order to generate a topical talking point. It comes out of nowhere, and although this does make for a great last minute surprise, it shows that the directors were more concerned with being clever, rather than delivering a solid, thought-provoking and plausible horror/thriller.

    Still, taken on the basis of its first 60 minutes, and the individual scenes that make up the greater whole, this is still an enjoyable if not entirely successful little film that is sure to guarantee a number of thrills, chills and edge of your seat moments of pure, white-knuckle tension; even if the final moments do show it up to be as dodgy and inconsistent as the majority of similarly themed films from Hollywood and the UK. Certainly worth renting.
  • April 26, 2009
    This is a creepy French film reminiscent of The Strangers, scenery comparable to what's used in High(Haute)Tension, and a flavor of it's own giving it an amount of unique suspense.
    The film is based on true events, and is something that we all don't expect, but conceive horrific...( read more) ideas of what may arise from generations on the uprise.
  • April 15, 2009
    I haven't seen a film this tense in a very long time. Building slowly into an adrenaline-pumping climax, it's a thrilling film with one of the most twisted ending revelations I've ever seen. For this reason, I believe Ils to be a superior film to its English counterpart, The St...( read more)rangers. Recommended for horror fans - Ils is guaranteed to take you on a ride.
  • September 13, 2008
    "We just want to play with you... won't you play with us?"

    Despite the similarity of the title, Them (Ils in France and all other French-speaking countries around the globe) is not a remake of Gordon Douglas' 1954 ant-invasion cult film, Them!. Plante...( read more)d more firmly in reality, the film - a lean and suspense-filled horror tale inspired by true events - imagines the kind of terror that must be felt when a person's private home is invaded. It isn't perfect by a long shot, but it's pretty damn creepy and competently made.

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    Taking place almost completely in the span of a single night, debut writer-directors David Moreau and Xavier Palud cut right to the point, working up a sense of unease that is all the more effective because there are no sub-plots or inessential supporting characters to get in the way of the centrepiece storyline. Where Them does run into problems is in an unsatisfying pay-off that lessens a mystery that should have remained just that. In the hands of more experienced filmmakers, this film could've achieved greatness - don't let anyone tell you otherwise.

    As we know, the French make horror films like pandas make love - not very often. But when they do, they really get their rocks off. Them is an important film because, in a way, it proved once and for all that they could really make decent horror films - a task Alexandre Aja had already picked up on three years before with High Tension. In the last couple of years there's probably been more films of this genre produced in France than in the last decade. The fact that these aren't great films is perfectly understandable. The best, I'm sure, was - and is - yet to come.

    Them is no cerebral chin-stroker, it's an adrenaline-laced jolt of pure fear. Everycouple Clémentine (Olivia Bonamy) and Lucas (Michaël Cohen), having fulfilled the fantasy of many intellectuals - moving to the country, away from big buildings, traffic and angry people - live in Romania, where she teaches the Gallic tongue, and he loafs around writing his newest novel. One day, after a normal day's work, their isolated house on the edge of a forest near Bucharest is invaded, their car stolen and electrical system tampered with. Then, for the next 45 minutes or so, they run, hide, scream and gasp for breath while trying not to fall victim to the hands of whoever's after them.

    Qu'est-ce que c'est? Well, the less you know, the better it works. Moreau and Palud keep you in the dark (often quite literally, as they're fond of confined spaces and shoot predominantly at night). Sadly your over-active imagination is likely to be scarier than anything the directing pair can deliver, which may be the film's biggest, most glaring flaw. The "Is that it?" ending will leave some disappointed, but what comes before it is worth seeing. Or not seeing, since you'll probably have your hands locked over your peepers as the faceless terror creeps around, creaking floorboards and breaking windows.

    The film is always simple and direct about its intentions and, at 77 minutes, it's practically one really long sequence stretched out over an hour. The prologue is the only deviation from the focus on Clémentine and Lucas - a fantastically scary opener in which a bickering mother (Camelia Maxim) and teenage daughter (Maria Roman) become stranded on a lonesome stretch of country road and are subsequently stalked by an unseen person or presence. The use of rain, tight camera angles, creepy sound effects, and a feeling of hopeless isolation built within the mise en scène all work together to create a fever-pitch of tension.

    Unfortunately, the early and midsection dread somewhat dissipates in a climax where the identity of the villain (or villains) is revealed. One of the most effective aspects of Them is the decision to keep the intruders in shadows and background shots. For a while, one isn't even positive that the perpetrator is human, and it's this lingering lack of knowledge that gives the film its kick. It should have remained this way from beginning to end, because where the narrative finally leads is a bit disappointing and standard-issue. It should be mentioned, however, that one of the final shots - you'll know it when you see it - does, indeed, leave a truly vivid and haunting impression.

    Them shares a producer with Irréversible and, like Gaspar Noé's back-to-front revenge-rape drama, it could have been ripped straight from the tabloid headlines. It helps that actors Bonamy and Cohen aren't the usual formulaic American teen victims. Instead, they draw us in since they look like us, act like us and - here comes the shiver - could be us. That gives the film's standout shocks a truly disturbing quality. Clémentine's creep through a loft space covered with an absurd abundance of plastic sheeting, an eyeball/keyhole scene lifted straight out of Dario Argento and a subterranean tunnel climax lingering in the corners of the mind even when you're back on the sofa with your front door securely locked.

    The flaws of Them are simply by-products of the cut-down style. The very short runtime makes you walk away feeling like there wasn't enough story to tell, no matter how well told it may have been. It's also a classic example of a film that loses some of its power as more details are revealed. When we learn the identities of the tormentors, as disturbing as they are, it's not so much shocking as it is deflating. The unknown will always be scarier than the known. It often feels a bit repetitious at times but nowhere near as much as most of its American genre peers that keep coming out year after fucking year.
  • August 9, 2008
    Truely creepy and trunt little french movie.Watch this before the hollywood movie The Strangers and than decied.I did like the ending to this was a lilttle shocker.
  • January 4, 2010
    A a great edge of your seat thriller.
  • November 26, 2009
    A very good French gem in suspense. A pleasant surprise where a movie like The strangers, Vacancy, movies like that came from. The two leads were excellent in their role and to see who the antagonists at the end are make this just a tad more creepier. Even the beginning with the ...( read more)mother and daughter really drags you into this, but the movie is very short, but to the point. Doesn't overdo things and the fact that this was based on a true story and then what one of the villains said, creepy.
  • November 20, 2009
    Suspense around every corner and excellent cinematography make this a horror flick worth watching.
  • November 12, 2009
    If a fan of the Strangers, then you should check out this French version. I don't know if its the lack of dialogue, or the eerie subtitles that make this film spooky, but I definitely found it creepier than the Strangers. Of course, the idea of being secluded in a giant house w...( read more)ith one other person was never a pleasant thought. The flick's growing tension stems from its faceless predators, dark lighting and limited dialogue. The tension never quite ceases but concludes in a gut-wrenching manner.
  • November 6, 2009
    Tense thriller in the vein of "The Strangers" with a light sprinkle of "The Blair Witch Project". The two leads are dynamite, it seems the French have an endless supply of these hot, young actors. My only quibble, how can a young school teacher and a struggling writer afford such...( read more) a sprawling French mansion!

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