The Hole In The Ground 2022

The Hole In The Ground 2022




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The Hole In The Ground 2022
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This article is missing information about the film's production. Please expand the article to include this information. Further details may exist on the talk page . ( May 2019 )

Savage Productions
Wrong Men
Made
Irish Film Board
Bankside Films
Wallimage
VOO
Be TV
BNP Paribas
Fortis Film Finance
Head Gear Films
Metrol Technology
Broadcasting Authority of Ireland
Finnish Film Foundation


Wildcard Distribution (Ireland)
Vertigo Films (United Kingdom)
A24 (United States)


25 January 2019 ( 2019-01-25 ) ( Sundance )
1 March 2019 ( 2019-03-01 ) (UK and Ireland)

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This section needs expansion . You can help by adding to it . ( March 2019 )
The Hole in the Ground is a 2019 supernatural horror film , directed by Lee Cronin in his feature debut film, from a screenplay by Cronin and Stephen Shields. It stars Seána Kerslake , James Cosmo , Kati Outinen , Simone Kirby , Steve Wall , and James Quinn Markey. It follows a young woman who begins to suspect that her son's disturbing behavior is linked to a mysterious sinkhole.

The film had its world premiere at the Sundance Film Festival on 25 January 2019. It was released on 1 March 2019 by Wildcard Distribution in Ireland and by Vertigo Releasing in the United Kingdom.

Sarah O’Neill and her son Christopher ("Chris") move to the Irish countryside to start a new life in a rented house next to an old forest, after leaving Chris's father. Sarah worries about Chris's lack of interest in making new friends, but doesn't push the matter. While driving, Sarah almost hits an old woman named Noreen Brady standing in the middle of the road, causing the car's sideview mirror to break and fall off. When she exits the car to retrieve the mirror, Sarah notices Noreen whispering to herself before she turns to stare at Chris in silence.

After returning home, Chris becomes frightened by a spider and Sarah catches it in a jar. Outside, Chris asks her why they came here without his father, and says that his father would have killed the spider instead of releasing it. An upset Sarah releases the spider from the jar and Chris stomps on it before running away from her and into the forest. Sarah follows Chris, but is unable to catch him. She starts to get worried and eventually comes upon a large sinkhole in the middle of the forest. Believing that her son might be hurt, she turns around in a panic and discovers Chris standing behind her. Chris hasn’t seen the sinkhole yet and asks what’s behind her.

At a dinner party with friends that evening, Sarah discovers that one of her friends was in the same class with Noreen's son James when the pair were children. Her friend says that Noreen once burst into the classroom screaming before being restrained and taken to the principal's office before the police arrived. Her friend claims, James was consequently taken out of school and murdered by Noreen after she ran him over with her car.

Later that night, Sarah awakens to sounds downstairs. She finds Chris missing from his bedroom. She discovers that the door is open, and flees into the forest, believing Chris has run away. She searches in the dark for some time but cannot find Chris. After returning home, she calls the police, only to discover Chris standing in the doorway of his bedroom. Sarah visits a doctor the next day and is prescribed sedatives .

While driving Chris home from school, Sarah comes across Noreen, who is standing in the middle of the road again. Sarah exits the car and asks her to move, before meeting Noreen's kind husband Des. The two talk, while Noreen approaches the car. She notices Chris and becomes enraged, screaming that he is not Sarah's son while hitting the window with her head. Des pulls her away, and Sarah drives home in shock.

Sarah visits the Bradys’ house the day after, and discovers Noreen has been mysteriously murdered in a gruesome way, having her head buried in the dirt. Sarah attends Noreen's funeral, and notices that all the mirrors in Noreen’s house are covered with black cloths. Des explains to Sarah that Noreen believed their son James was an imposter ; she could apparently tell by looking at James’s reflection in a mirror, and the habit soon became an obsession. Sarah asks what happened to James, and Des reveals that it was him, not his wife, who didn't see James dart into the road and hit him with his car.

Sarah and Chris's relationship begins to fracture; Chris suddenly develops a fondness for spaghetti bolognese and parmesan cheese, a dish he previously hated, and when Sarah confronts him about finding his toy soldier in the forest during a run, he grows enraged and pushes the dinner table towards her in an uncharacteristic display of strength . Chris suddenly becomes friends with his schoolmates, and plans to join the talent show . Sarah hears strange noises whilst bathing one night and later observes Chris catching and eating spiders in his bedroom. The next day, she visits the doctor who tells her that everything is normal. Despite this, she is convinced Chris isn't himself.

Sarah and Chris sit down for breakfast after she finishes the task of wallpapering the house. While Chris is eating, Sarah tells him that she loves him, and Chris begins to touch her face. When his fingers touch the scar on her forehead, he suddenly digs them into her skin. Sarah wakes up, and realises it was a nightmare . She watches Chris perform in the school talent show. During his verse, Chris zones in on Sarah and begins to speak his lines in an emotionless voice. Sarah then flees from the hall, and later from Chris when he is walked back to her by a teacher.

Sarah hides a camera in her son's room in an effort to monitor Chris' nighttime behavior, and after watching the footage she becomes more convinced than ever that he is not her real son. She takes the camera over to Des’s house to show him the evidence. However, after Des watches the video, he becomes enraged and throws the camera at the floor. Confronting him, Sarah asks Des to tell her if he truly doesn't believe her, to which Des replies that he can't.

Eventually, Sarah ascertains that Chris is a shapeshifter . While the creature watches television, she says they're going to play one of their favourite games - in which Sarah counts to three, and then they both pull faces. But after she counts, the creature just stares at her blankly. Sarah then tells him that he is not her son while being backed into the kitchen by the creature. The creature snaps, and begins to throw her across the kitchen repeatedly.

An injured Sarah later wakes in the garden, where the creature is shown digging a hole, before he drags her over and begins to bury her headfirst, in the same manner as Noreen. He then falls asleep (having been drugged by Sarah, with the medication she got from the doctor) and Sarah frees herself. She drags the creature to the house's basement and finds the broken car mirror. Placing it to the side of the creature’s face, he is revealed to be a shapeshifter. He begins to revive and after a minor scuffle, Sarah locks him in the basement and flees to the forest's sinkhole.

Sarah goes to the bottom of the sinkhole, crawls in underground tunnels in the earth, and eventually finds a child that looks like Chris still alive, buried deep in the ground among dozens of formless and faceless creatures. As the two escape, she is followed by a grotesque formless shapeshifter. As they reach the end of the tunnel, Sarah sees the creature’s hand on her wrist and frantically hits it with her torch . The hand suddenly turns to human flesh, and Sarah shines the light down the tunnel to see that the monster has taken her form. Sarah and Chris return to the house, and Sarah enters to retrieve the car keys before setting the house on fire with the changeling that was Chris still inside. She and the real Chris drive away to start a new life back in the city; Sarah begins to attend university , and Chris happily settles into their new house.

One day, while Chris is playing on his bike outside, Sarah takes some pictures of him through the window. Viewing the pictures, she sees that Chris's face is very blurry compared to the rest of the image. The final shot shows that Sarah has covered the walls of the living room in mirrors.

In December 2018, A24 and DirecTV Cinema acquired U.S. distribution rights to the film. [3] The same month, Vertigo Releasing acquired U.K. and Irish distribution rights. [4] The film had its world premiere at the Sundance Film Festival on 25 January 2019, [5] and was theatrically released in Ireland and the United States on 1 March 2019. [6] [7]

The Hole in the Ground grossed a total worldwide of $3.4 million, with $21,072 in North America. [2] [8]

As of October 2021 [update] , the film holds an 83% approval rating on review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes , based on 88 reviews, with an average rating of 6.3/10. The website's critical consensus reads, " The Hole in the Ground artfully exploits parental fears with a well-made horror outing that makes up in sheer effectiveness what it lacks in originality." [9] On Metacritic , the film has a weighted average score of 63 out of 100, based on 16 critics, indicating "generally positive reviews." [10]



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Watch IMDbrief: 3 Takeaways from Sundance 2019
A24 has produced some of the most memorable horror films of the 21st century, including X , Midsommar , Men , and more. See which films ranked highest with IMDb users.
The film draws from elements of Irish folklore such as the concept of Changelings (children being replaced by fairy folk) and Fairy Forts (the ruins of neolithic tombs scattered all over Ireland that are associated with many local traditions and folklore and are often thought to be portals to the Otherworld).
DESIRE Performed by Val James Written by Cathal McKeon One Two Many Songs Ltd.
Super boring, bad dialog, poor character development, barely watchable.
This just didn't do it for me, sorry. There were a few creepy scenes and that's about it. I could barely keep my eyes awake. The dialog was unimpressive and flat out boring. I think this might have worked as a 6 or 8 part mini series, with better writing, stronger character development, better expaination of the town, people, the big ass hole in the woods, just for starters. The way they went with just a regular movie with no explaination or development of anything, especially about the hole, once that was glossed over I pretty much knew it was all in her head, but was it.....???
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By what name was The Hole in the Ground (2019) officially released in India in Hindi?
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A single mother living in the Irish countryside with her son begins to suspect he may not be her son at all, and fears his increasingly disturbing behavior is linked to a mysterious sinkhole... Read all A single mother living in the Irish countryside with her son begins to suspect he may not be her son at all, and fears his increasingly disturbing behavior is linked to a mysterious sinkhole in the forest behind their house. A single mother living in the Irish countryside with her son begins to suspect he may not be her son at all, and fears his increasingly disturbing behavior is linked to a mysterious sinkhole in the forest behind their house.
Sarah O'Neill : Something's not right with him.

Politics | The Hole in the Center of American Politics
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The State of the 2022 Midterm Elections With the primaries over, both parties are shifting their focus to the general election on Nov. 8. The Final Stretch : With less than one month until Election Day, Republicans remain favored to take over the House, but momentum in the pitched battle for the Senate has seesawed back and forth . A Surprising Battleground : New York has emerged from a haywire redistricting cycle as perhaps the most consequential congressional battleground in the country . For Democrats, the uncertainty is particularly jarring. Pennsylvania Governor’s Race: Attacks by Doug Mastriano, the G.O.P. nominee, on the Jewish school where Josh Shapiro, the Democratic candidate, sends his children have set off an outcry about antisemitic signaling . Herschel Walker: The Republican Senate nominee in Georgia reportedly paid for an ex-girlfriend’s abortion , but some conservative Christians have learned to tolerate the behavior of those who advance their cause .
Disaffected Republicans have taken wildly divergent paths to opposing Donald Trump. We will soon get new tests of whose strategy is working better.
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This article is part of our Midterms 2022 Daily Briefing
Republican politicians who don’t support Donald Trump have made starkly different choices over the last five years.
Some, like Senator Mitch McConnell of Kentucky, have tempered their criticism of the 45th president — opposing him at times, while accommodating him at others in service of their partisan objectives.
A smaller coterie of others, like Representative Liz Cheney of Wyoming, have opposed Trump vigorously — in her case, voting to impeach him and helping lead the House investigation into his conduct on Jan. 6, 2021. On Thursday evening, Cheney will again take center stage as the Jan. 6 panel holds what is expected to be its final prime-time hearing of July .
As Peter Baker writes , Cheney and her allies are betting that history’s judgment will eventually vindicate their choices, while insisting that her motives are not political.
“I believe this is the most important thing I’ve ever done professionally,” Cheney told Baker in an interview, “and maybe the most important thing I ever do.”
Thus far, however, the accommodationists have carried the day. McConnell worked closely with the Trump White House to stock the federal judiciary with more than 200 conservative judges , realizing a decades-long project that culminated with the hard-right transformation of the Supreme Court and the reversal of Roe v. Wade.
Republicans are also poised to retake the House in November, and possibly the Senate, even though the official organs of the party have rallied behind Trump and, in the case of the Republican National Committee, helped pay his considerable legal bills.
Still, Trump’s consolidation of the base of the Republican Party — the MAGA die-hards who wouldn’t blanch if he shot someone on Fifth Avenue, proverbially speaking — has left a vacuum at the center of American politics that both parties have jostled to fill.
Democrats seized the middle in the 2018 midterms, retaking the House by focusing on kitchen-table issues like health care, while setting themselves up to win full control of Congress two years later. Republicans have countered this year by seizing on inflation and various cultural issues in an attempt to portray Democrats as out of the mainstream.
One reason behind all this political volatility: College-educated suburban voters have bounced around from election to election, making that bloc a kind of no-man’s land between two entrenched camps.
Vacuums like this always attract political entrepreneurs, and there has been a flourishing of activity aimed at these voters. On Politics has covered a lot of that new energy over the past few months, from new parties popping up to megadonor-backed independent ballot initiatives to cash-flush super PACs mucking around in Republican primaries .
In previous years, groups with names like “No Labels” and “Third Way” have claimed the mantle of political centrism. But partisan voters have generally scoffed at those efforts, suspecting them of being Trojan horses for corporate donors. Other centrist initiatives, like the anti-communist, pro-labor group Americans for Democratic Action, faded in influence as their historical moment passed.
David Greenberg, a historian of American politics at Rutgers University, said there was a “huge number of people who are disaffected from where the Democratic Party seems to be going,” along with the exhaustively documented and better organized never-Trump Republicans.
But he noted that structural impediments like the Electoral College had made it difficult for third parties and other groups to establish themselves, even when voters seem sympathetic to their arguments.
On occasion, charismatic figures like Theodore Roosevelt, who ran for president in 1912 under the banner of the “Bull Moose Party,” have tried to galvanize the middle of the electorate and run against both poles. More often, though, attempts to break Democrats’ and Republicans’ chokehold on the system have foundered owing to a lack of strong leaders.
Greenberg marveled at the irony, too, that so many Americans now feel that the two major parties have been driven to appeal only to their respective bases.
“If you really go back historically, it was thought that our two-party system itself was a bulwark against extremism,” he said — as opposed to multiparty systems in places like Weimar Germany that allowed radical groups to assume power without ever commanding a majority of voters.
One of the more interesting centrist-y experiments out there is happening in Missouri, where a former Republican senator, John Danforth, is backing an independent candidate for Senate, John Wood. A former Danforth aide, Wood was most recently a prosecutor on the Jan. 6 panel.
In an interview, Danforth said his goal was to provide an alternative to two major political parties that, in his view, have each gone off course in their own way.
“The problem is not just in Trump or the Republican Party,” Danforth said, though he said he was disturbed that Republicans were attacking the legitimacy of the 2020 presidential election and of court cases ratifying the results.
“But on the other hand,” he added, “we have identity politics, we have the cancel culture. We have the whole sort of presentation of America as oppressors and victims. And that’s not healthy, either.”
“The whole point of this campaign is: We have to heal the country,” Danforth said.
A consummate Republican insider, Danforth grew up in elite circles in St. Louis and attended Princeton University and Yale Law School, where he also picked up a master’s degree in divinity. After a stint in corporate law, he was elected state attorney general, then became a senator at the dawn of the slow Republican takeover of Missouri politics.
At a time when politicians tend to find more success by railing against Washington elites, Danforth, 85, is an unapologetic defender of the old ways of doing business. He was especially offended by the storming of the Capitol, an event that led him to break with Senator Josh Hawley, a Missouri politician he mentored and helped usher into office in 2018.
Supporting Hawley, Danforth told The St. Louis Post-Dispatch after the freshman lawmaker greeted the Capitol mob with a raised fist on Jan. 6, was “the worst mistake I ever made in my life.”
And while Danforth professed optimism about Wood’s chances, which most Missouri political analysts rate as poor, he said he felt compelled to try.
“We are not a corrupt system,” he said. “We are not a system that people should attack, either in the Capitol Building or by this take-up-arms view of politics. That’s why
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