Los Angeles Times

Child’s play with terrifying twist

Norwegian children explore their psychic abilities in Eskil Vogt’s eerie ‘The Innocents.’

- By Katie Walsh Walsh is a Tribune News Service film critic.*

The babes in the woods of Eskil Vogt’s “The Innocents” are some of the scariest kids you’ll see on a movie screen this year. Bored over the summer holidays, they while away the long hours inflicting a kind of casual cruelty on animals and other children, motivated by childish curiosity, subconscio­us trauma and newly discovered psychic abilities. Vogt, the Oscar-nominated cowriter of “The Worst Person in the World” and longtime collaborat­or of Joachim Trier, lays out the story of how and why these kids are trapped in this destructiv­e cycle with careful economy.

Ida (Rakel Lenora Fløttum), with an impercepti­ble expression and long curtain of blond hair, arrives at her new home, an apartment in a large Norwegian housing complex next to a forest, with her parents and older sister, Anna (Alva Brynsmo Ramstad). As the parents dote on her autistic, nonverbal sibling, Ida is left by herself to face the playground, where she meets Ben (Sam Ashraf), who wants to show her a trick.

Ben has discovered that he can move objects with his mind, using deep concentrat­ion to fling a bottle cap across the forest floor. It amuses Ida, and the two forge a unique friendship, based on their own dark predilecti­ons, experiment­ing with misbehavio­r, including kidnapping a wayward cat for a prank that turns harrowingl­y violent.

Though that incident gives Ida pause about Ben, they soon discover that the cat’s owner, Aisha (Mina Yasmin Bremseth Asheim), another young girl in the complex, has a psychic connection with Anna, able to sense the thoughts that she is otherwise unable to express. There’s a moment where the foursome exist in a kind of happy, bewildered harmony, with Anna, Aisha and Ben learning to develop their abilities. With Ida looking on, they become a little trio of “X-Men” characters: outsiders who are different, possessed of great powers that they don’t have the ability to quite control or understand. What they will do with these powers is the question driving the horror-tinged, supernatur­al drama.

This is Vogt’s second feature film after 2014’s “Blind,” starring Ellen Dorrit Petersen, who plays Ida and Anna’s mother in “The Innocents.” Like “Blind,” this movie examines the darkness that creeps into the cracks of domestic spaces. Ida’s quietly hostile jealousy toward her sister manifests in disdain and sometimes passive aggressive violence, but in Ben’s home, fractured irreparabl­y by abuse and neglect, darkness takes hold, and spreads to Ida, Aisha and Anna with increasing danger, resulting in bloodshed and tragedy.

Vogt’s direction is methodical, carefully laying out the geography of this space and each child’s family situation, bringing the audience behind the closed doors that their neighbors can’t see beyond. The housing complex itself represents the unique rules of this world: families living together but apart, placed in relationsh­ip to each other in densely populated apartments, isolated in nature.

It’s the first film for each of the child actors; they are remarkably subtle and astute in their performanc­es. Vogt builds the tension slowly, the camera observatio­nal, slowly pushing in or pulling out. It’s almost like the frog being slowly boiled: Ida doesn’t realize how dire it’s become until it’s too late, as Ben spirals out of control.

It’s hard to condemn any of these kids because they’re victims of their circumstan­ces — Ben’s violent expression is a crystalliz­ation of his trauma, pain and rage.

The film maintains a quiet dynamic even throughout the most horrific moments, and while you might expect, or even want, the film to climax more operatical­ly, the understate­d tone is a radical choice. It resists sensationa­lism while suggesting that the world of children is far more powerful, morally complex and violent than adults are even aware of, a notion both terrifying and fascinatin­g. They are villains and heroes, but ultimately, they are all innocents.

 ?? IFC Midnight ?? “THE INNOCENTS,” from Eskil Vogt, stars child actors Rakel Lenora Fløttum, left, and Sam Ashraf.
IFC Midnight “THE INNOCENTS,” from Eskil Vogt, stars child actors Rakel Lenora Fløttum, left, and Sam Ashraf.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States