The Hypnotist (2012) Poster

(2012)

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5/10
Crap within the genre and also Hallströms worst
rlaine31 August 2014
Warning: Spoilers
I'm a big fan of both Lasse Hallström and Swedish crime drama (Beck, Wallander etc), so needless to say I was expecting a lot from this. I didn't come here before watching, so I had no idea of the low score and I can tell you it's totally justified, maybe even too high.

Crime drama clearly is not Lasse Hallströms forte. He's done some remarkable films and often creates very likable, believable and true to life characters. While Persbrandt and Olin create somewhat solid characters, they are still miles away from characters Hallström has previously put on screen. The rest of the cast on the other hand is just amazingly dull and underdeveloped.

I haven't read any detective Joona Linna books, so I have no knowledge of him as a character. And after watching this movie I still know absolutely nothing about him. I don't know if he is also downplayed in the books, but in this movie he's just plain uninteresting. There is no background info at all. The detective characters are the driving force behind all crime series. Wallander and Beck are both very solid and interesting characters as is the Norwegian Varg Veum. Germans have crafted the art of "krimi" for years and are masters in that genre. Hallström clearly hasn't watched any of those. Altho I was wondering at times if they had just made a bad casting choice with Tobias Zilliacus and wanted to minimize his screen time in editing and instead focus on Persbrandt and Olin, who steal the show. Zilliacus - at least with his screen time - is incredibly boring and lacks charisma.

Then the story. While initially interesting, the script is just horrible. I will probably have to read the book just to see how they filled in the plot holes that ended up in the movie. Absolutely nothing is logical here. Why did the crime happen? The relationship between the boy and his mother is a complete mystery. A lot of loose ends like her sister. It's a complete mess and the pacing is horrible. The finale is rushed after spending way too much time on everything else.

The only positive things in this movie is the relatively atmospheric cinematography and the acting by Mikaeal Persbrandt. Since this was the first of the Linna series, there will probably be more. They probably wanted a big name to direct the first and then make the rest with a different crew and an established crime series director like Kjell Sundvall or Anders Engström (atleast I hope so).

Not for fans of the genre.
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7/10
Scandinavian crime drama
Laakbaar19 January 2013
The current rating on IMDb is too low. This is an enjoyable enough film. It's certainly worth taking in, especially if you're into crime dramas.

The plot is fairly straightforward. Three members of a family are brutally killed, only the oldest boy surviving. He's in a coma though. Police investigator Joona Linna (played by Tobias Zilliacus) ends up investigating the crime. He gets a doctor to come in to hypnotise the boy to identify his assailant, and the doctor succeeds in doing so. (It is apparently possible for comatose patients to talk under hypnosis.) But then the doctor and his family become caught up in the drama. Will the killer be stopped?

It's a good, simple story. The start and end of the movie in particular are quite strong. The climactic scene at the isolated farm was unexpected and the best part of the movie. Spectacular filmmaking really. It had me on the edge of my seat.

The acting was fine. There's a lot of character development involving Joona Linna, Erik Maria Bark (played by Mikael Persbrandt) and his wife Simone (played by Lena Olin). The movie is called "The Hypnotist" but I didn't really see the doctor as being at the centre of the movie.

This is a slow paced movie, a little too slow for me at times. That might be why people have not rated it higher.

Most of the events take place in a hospital and three homes. There are a lot of shots of wintry Stockholm, a suitable backdrop I suppose for a dark Scandinavian crime drama. I enjoyed what I assume is a realistic portrayal of Swedish life. The dialogue was in Swedish, with subtitles. Everything in the movie seemed rather understated and starkly realistic. This is not a grand Sweden of magic and beauty.

As you might expect in a thoroughly Swedish movie, mental illness and human foibles are the major crime themes. No Hollywood moralising here about good and evil, right and wrong.

Bias disclosure: This is not my favourite genre. I know next to nothing about Scandinavian crime novels, television shows and movies. I haven't even yet read the Larsson "Girl" trilogy, although my sister gave it to me two years ago. Even most American or British crime shows don't interest me, although I am an avid fan of Law & Order.

Also, I went to see this movie without knowing anything about it. Haven't read the book. I didn't even know it was a Swedish movie. Even so, I thought it was OK. You might too.
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5/10
Solid book, movie ... not that much
Tanimed28 April 2014
First of all, if you can read something, better do that and only then watch the movie. To see if your imagination and fantasy after reading something is near/far from something that the director had in his mind.

The book itself is solid, interesting read, I love thrillers and mysteries and as a thriller there are multiple options to make you think that you know the answer. To some it might be predictable, to some like me, are let to be driven by the book. It is a long book and has some parts that could have been shorter ... but at the finish you feel good about it.

The movie however, I know it is difficult to put everything in a two hour movie, plus to keep the focus and the things interesting, but the scenario is changed. There are so many good book adaptations on screen, but sadly this is not one of them. So many things are not like they are shown in the movie. That is what bothered me the most. Stick to the story! And secondly I was not impressed with the acting at all. Very frigid, yes I know the book is a little bit dark and the characters are as well, but somehow even the slightest emotions are presented very cold and robotic.

You don't have to agree, after all that is my opinion. And to conclude my opinion, I say read the book. Much more fun.
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Didn't know I could dislike Lena Ohlin this much
jmalmsten29 March 2013
It's a strange feeling, watching Swedish genre movies of this kind. Because, even as a swede myself. It never feels natural. It feels like a pale imitation of something that HBO would slap together for an episode of another CSI knockoff.

Starting of with the plot. Which is infuriatingly predictable. And if it's one thing a thriller shouldn't force its viewer to do it's to make us sit and patiently wait for the characters to catch up with the obvious conclusions that the viewer has already reached. This makes the few points that the movie does well into forgettable set-pieces. Things will happen that are mildly intriguing. But then a character will do something that just makes you want to slap them. They'll start to whine. Argue about something non-relevant. I swear. For a long time I even forgot that there was a murder in the movie because the story got so bogged down with lazily written marital problems. For most of the film I was simply thinking two things: "Get on with it!" and "Why are we still here?". And even "Naw, it couldn't be that simple? right? oh, it seems like... yup... they really think this was clever?"

And then there's the characters. My summary mentions Lena Ohlin. And yes. She did become my biggest gripe here. Every scene she was on screen I grew to dislike her even more than the last scene. When not picking unnecessary fights with everyone she meets she's being either hysterical or well... a bit less hysterical. I don't think it's the fault of the actress. Because I think no one would be able to save the characters written into the film. Bland. Uninteresting. Two-dimensional cardboard cutouts of personalities. Again. It's like watching a bad imitation of a mediocre American cop-show where the filmmakers think they're doing the next Sixth Sense.

In many ways it reminds me of the recent series called Äkta Människor. It's that feeling that you're watching a product that the makers are so fond of. But has no idea what has already been done in the genre. Or even worse, they figure that the audience (Swedish middle-class) hasn't seen the films they are influenced by.

About the only redeeming aspect here is the cinematography. But even that where mostly drab grey. Dark and bland...

But as it seems to have been fairly well received I might be in the minority here. It had a couple of interesting ideas in execution. But at the same time it's just too bogged down in mediocrity to stand out in any way, shape or form.
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6/10
watchable, with flaws
ssto10 February 2013
i thought the movie was quite good while watching it. it is a nice thriller, with suspense to the very end.

somewhat strange motivations of the main villain, but then you probably cannot really connect to insane motives.

it was kind of strange that while the hypnotist's character was well developed, with character history and family environment, the other main character - the cop, was very under-developed.

apart from this and a few weak moments that every decent thriller carries in order to support the storyline, it is a pretty good production
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6/10
Poorly adapted and too much change from the book
mttiro2 April 2018
The movie "The Hypnotist" (2012) is based on the 2009 novel by the same name that launched the husband-wife writing team of Alexandra Coelho Ahndoril and Alexander Ahndoril, writing as Lars Kepler, into the Scandanavian crime-novel genre. This novel, which introduced Swedish Detective Superintendent Joona Linna, vaulted quickly onto the best-seller lists when the English translation came out in 2011. The 6 installments of the Joona Linna series have so far sold 12 million copies. IMO, the books are well-written, though not quite at the Per Wahloo-Maj Sjowall or Henning Mankell level. But they're still very good.

This movie, OTOH, does not measure up to the book in many ways. First, and *always* foremost, is "How faithful is the adaptation of the screenplay to the action of the book?" Every film changes something. Sometimes the filmmakers makes good changes. They resolve the plot more efficiently and more believably than what happens in the book. Alas, that cannot be said for this movie. Without including any spoilers, I'll just say that the film changes the book in a completely unrealistic, unbelievable way.

Second is casting and character. Some really serious questions could be asked here about why the producers chose the actor they chose for the lead role of Joona Linna (a male, btw), and also for the dr. who is also a hypnotist--? IMO, those 2 actors could've switched roles and the film would've worked better. I also felt that the character of Simone, played by Lena Olin, was manipulated by the screenplay in unfavorable ways. Just let her be who the authors wanted her to be, for crying out loud.

I also have the same 2 questions I always have whenever I watch a European-made movie about Europeans. 1, Are all Europeans, and especially kids, really as surly and hateful and disrespectful toward the police as the movie-makers portray them to be? And 2, Are all European men really as passive and unassertive as European movies portray them to be? They never verbally defend themselves, never respond when someone, even a punk kid, accuses them of ridiculous nonsense, never say anything. They just sit there and take all the abuse anyone wants to throw at them. I can't believe Europe is really like that. But European *movies* are really like that.

Bottom line--read the book. This movie could've been so much better with 2-3 tweaks. It got a lot right. But it changed far too much.
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3/10
Read the book!!!
kristian198730 July 2013
The film is quite enjoyable but it does not come close to the book. I think this is the main reason why the movie has such a low rating: majority of people watching this film were first readers of the book. I did not expect word for word adaptation of the book, but this film does not do justice to the story. It alters and reinvent the story. It takes a few motives from the book but that's it. I was quite disappointment. Maybe I am biased and I'm judging the film in comparison to the book. But what can I say, the screen play is just bad. What it has me baffled is, why did the two authors allow the release of the movie in state as it is? If only goal was commercial success than I am deeply disappointed.
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7/10
Gifted performances, but a bit protracted plot
BeneCumb13 March 2013
Although the plot is based on a solid book, there are too many too long scenes not providing additional value to the film (especially those in the darkness) - apparently, the world-famous director Lasse Halström wanted to act in the line of Wallander-Beck-Blomkvist type of films, but the Linna- Mark tandem is less elaborated and weaker; well, Mikael Persbrandt is great as Erik Maria Bark, so is Lena Olin as Simone Bark, but they are both long-time highly recognised character actors. The plot has also several confusing and unanswered moments, the ending gives a solution (rather dramatic and peculiar), but it is strange why the film was selected as the Swedish entry for the Best Foreign Language Oscar - it is definitely not among the top films with Hallström's participation. Nevertheless, it is watchable to those fond of Swedish crime thrillers.
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1/10
Truly awful
peter-593-22147928 January 2013
Warning: Spoilers
Contains some spoilers! With a script based on a best selling crime novel, a Hollywood director (Lasse Hallström), a big budget (SEK 61 million = almost USD 10 million), two star actors (Mikael Persbrandt and Lena Ohlin) you would think the result would be exceptional. It is. Exceptionally bad unfortunately. The peculiar murder story has so many plot wholes it becomes laughable. Trying to explain one will just tear up a new one. For example: What made the murderer follow his mothers instructions and murder his family? Why would a mother instruct her son to stab himself in the chest so that he almost dies? How did the mother get a job at the hospital? Why would the mother suddenly think the hypnotist's son is hers? Absolutely nothing is explained. The main character detective Jonna Linna is incredibly weak and dull. Almost nothing is revealed about his private life and absolutely no character development. Instead way too much time is spent on Mikael Persbrandt and Lena Ohlin's characters and their relationship, which is not relevant at all to the main story. The way the police acts is just stupid. Would the parents of a kidnapped son be allowed to come with the police to the kidnappers house? Would a police officer lower his gun when standing face to face with a kidnapper armed with a shotgun and responsible for the murder of several persons? I don't think so. Several supporting characters and plots are presented without any relevance to the main story. Trust me, this is a complete mess. The fact that this film was Sweden's foreign-language Oscar submission is nothing but a joke. The Oscar academy wisely did not nominate it.
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7/10
Hypnotize me
kosmasp1 July 2013
The title might be a little bit off, if you think about what the movie is really about. But that shouldn't put you off it. The story is more than neat and it's more than good to see such dramas/thrillers coming out of Europe. Especially because some of them have a new take on things, which makes for an interesting watch.

If you have seen a few movies from Sweden, you might even recognize an actor or two. But that is not the point of the movie! The movie that tangles and plays around with a few characters and their story lines, does so in a good way. It never gets too complicated and it never feels like things are in there to fill the running time. Good actors and a good nice story make this a movie to watch
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3/10
Plot void
ncg-212 June 2013
The movie features internationally known actors who perform excellent with the material they have got to work with. I never got to sympathize with any of them though, the script and the way Lasse Hallstrom directs never lets me. There is a fast pace throughout the movie where things just happen without visible motive or any chance of contemplation, which makes it feel erratic at best. All you can do as a watcher is to lean back and disconnect the grey cells.

As far as the plot goes, there are huge plot elements missing from the Swedish best selling book of 2009 which in my opinion never was that great to begin with. With the parts that gave the books some depth excluded we are left with a shallow story at most.

At least Lena Olins performance elevated the movie a notch, and I believe no other Swedish director than Hallstrom would have been able to provoke the feelings she is showing. The other actors were fair to good, not more not less.

I would not recommend this movie even if you have two hours to spare.
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8/10
Hypnotising.
morrison-dylan-fan8 July 2016
Warning: Spoilers
Being keen to get updated on what is happening in the UK after the "Brexit" vote,I took a look at the Twitter and YouTube pages of liarpoliticians. Near the top of the Twitter feed,I noticed him mention about watching a good Nordic Noir film on the BBC.Tracking down the title on iPlayer,I got set to meet the hypnotist.

The plot-

Christmas time:

Going to investigate the mass murder of a family (what a start to the Christmas season!) police officer Joona Linna finds the son (Josef) just about still alive.Taking Josef to ER,Linna tries to get info out of Josef about who did the killings,but is told by hospital staff that due to the state he is in,it will take some time before Josef is fit for questioning.Desperate to track the killer down,Linna decides to take an "alternative" route and hires hypnotist Erik Maria Bark to hypnotise Josef.As Bark starts to dip deeper into Josef's mind,a mysterious person involved with the killings,decides to show Bark that they are not happy with his involvement.

View on the film:

Casting a Christmas spirit over the Nordic Noir chill,co- writer/(along with Paolo Vacirca) director Lasse Hallström uses streets paved with snow to give this slice of X-Mas Noir some extra icy vibes. Diving into the Nordic Noir with elegant tracking shots hanging on the anxiety gripping Linna and Bark over finding the killer, Hallström & cinematographer Mattias Montero unexpectedly cuts into the Slasher genre,where chop-happy edits and stilted,swinging in the shadows give the tense,decayed Noir mood a visceral fury.

Spread from the novel by Alexander Ahndoril and Alexandra Coelho Ahndoril, (credited as the "godfathers" of Nordic Noir)the screenplay by Vacirca and Hallström cover the skin of Linna and Bark in shivering goosebumps,as the fog from Josef's memories pulls them to the knife edge of the killer,which the writers brilliantly use to open up the deeply flawed Noir background hovering over Bark. Bringing down the X-Mas lights,the writers freeze the despair tied round Bark and Linna to cut into the Slasher zone,that despite not pushing major changes on the sub-genre, (complete with mommy issues!) gives Linna's Noir investigation a brittle, threatening atmosphere.

Joining her husband Hallström, Lena Olin gives a very good performance as Simone Bark,whose outbursts of fear over her husband sinking deeper into the case Olin sends as a reverberating chill across the screen. Determined to fully uncover what took place at the family killing, Tobias Zilliacus gives a great performance as Linna,with the frustrations and hard-nosed aggression of Linna being carved on Zilliacus's face. Bringing fractured memories into focus, Mikael Persbrandt gives an excellent performance as Erik Maria Bark.Trying to keep the "troubles" with his hypnotising of the past hidden under ice, Persbrandt brilliantly wraps Bark in a shaken,intense Nordic Noir desire to prove his methods work,and also to keep the killer from stabbing into his family life,as Bark hypnotises the Nordic Noir.
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7/10
This is an excellent performance of the actors.
jens-597-280391 February 2013
Warning: Spoilers
This is an excellent performance of the actors. Having read the book helps though as the film can be a bit thin in the storytelling. However that is a worthy sacrifice since the film is reasonably true to the book. The book is quite multi-layered and deep, dark and sinister. What makes this film and the book work is that it lets your imagination flow. I wouldn't say that the plot is too far stretched nor fetched. It is a story both politically relevant and on many levels disclosing the maddening pain involved in losing those nearest to you without being able to do anything about it. The book is like a puzzle. Piece by piece the deepest darkest and very human trauma is revealed with stone cold precision. The weak point in this film and perhaps in the book too is that once the reality behind the trauma is revealed it ends pretty quickly though the ending in itself is really worthy of the book. I am looking forward to any sequels. So far four books in the series and they only get better.
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4/10
Poor even by low Swedish crime movie standards
Seth_Rogue_One1 September 2016
Lasse Hallström is a master of sentimental American Feel-Good Dramas with films like 'THE CIDERHOUSE RULE (1999)', 'WHAT'S EATING GILBERT GRAPE (1993)' and 'AN UNFINISHED LIFE (2005)' and others on his resume.

With 'THE HYPNOTIST (2012)' he decided to go back to his roots (at least country-wise) to Sweden after more than 20 years working abroad (primarily the US).

This movie is as far away from the typical feel-good movies he usually makes as possible though, a very bleak and very typical Swedish detective film.

Another thing you can usually count on with his films is great cinematography with beautiful rich and warm colours, but being that this movie is not his typical bag he decided to go the complete opposite in that aspect too.

Most scenes are filmed with intentional poor lighting to cause a sense of dread but honestly just makes it boring to look at instead with washed out colours and overall just a very unimpressive look (save for a couple outdoor scenes).

The script I guess it could have been an okay movie technically but the acting is really dodgy, especially the lead detective played by the unknown (for me at least) Tobias Zilliacus who's seemingly sleepwalking through the scenes for the more part.

Persbrandt and Olin occasionally gets it right but hardly either's proudest acting-moments.

Helena Af Sandeberg is in it for a little bit, I usually like her a lot but her role is fairly pointless in this one.

So yeah, not very impressive and incredibly drawn out.

It's based on a book and even though I haven't read it I am sure that that is much better than the movie, don't see how it could be any worse.
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7/10
The Hypnotist
Tweekums2 July 2016
Warning: Spoilers
When a gym teacher is found stabbed to death the police go to his home to inform his family and are shocked to discover that his wife and daughter have been similarly murdered and his son is seriously injured. He is taken to hospital but is unable to recall what happened. Detective Inspector Joona Linna is investigating the case but has no idea how to proceed until it is suggested that he brings in psychiatrist Erik Bark to hypnotise the boy. This leads to some advances in the case but it also leads to Bark and his family being targeted by a mystery character in a hood. This character breaks into their house, drugs his wife and kidnaps his son before making it clear that they want Bark to stop helping the investigation.

This is a decent enough Swedish murder mystery even if it felt more like a television drama than a film made for the cinema. The mystery was interesting enough and there were some twists… even if when they are revealed they feel a bit cliché. There is plenty of tension and an impressive finale involving a bus on a frozen lake. The acting is solid without being overly showy with fine performances from Tobias Zilliacus, Mikael Persbrandt and Lena Olin as DI Linna and the Barks. Overall a solid enough Scandi-drama that fans of the genre might enjoy even if it isn't one of the best.

These comments are based on watching the film in Swedish with English subtitles.
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7/10
Nice.
This is a cinema adaptation of the first book in the Joona Linna series written by Lars Kepler, a pseudonym for the married couple of Alexander and Alexandra Ahndoril. The Swedish duo has written seven installments until now and the novels have been a huge commercial success around the world. As I'm reading the latest book in the series, titled Lazarus, I decided to watch again the Hypnotist by Lasse Hallström, starring Tobias Zilliacus as Joona Linna and Mikael Persbrand in the role of the titular "Hypnotist", Erik Maria Bark. It should be noted that Hypnotist is the first book in the series and the only one that has been adapted to the cinema screen until now. It has been announced that the second installment, The Nightmare (original title: Paganinikontraktet), will be released soon, perhaps the following year.

The movie retains the basic premise of the book's story and begins with the brutal murder of a whole family that takes place in a quiet neighborhood in Stockholm. Joona Linna, a Finnish detective-inspector of Stockholm's Criminal Investigation Department, is the first officed on the scene and he finds the father, mother, and daughter slain in their home. The only survivor is the little son, Joseph, who is immediately transferred to the hospital as he is also severely injured. The boy is the only living witness of the slaughter, so Joona is desperate to talk with him in order to learn something about the culprit's identity. Unfortunately, though, Joseph seems to be unresponsive, so Joona calls Erik Maria Bark a doctor who is famous for treating acute trauma through hypnotism. Erik is initially reluctant to hypnotize Joseph but Joona's insistence forces him to act.

At the same time, we take a peek of Erik's family life in his house where he lives along with his wife, Simone (Lena Olin) and little son, Benjamin. Erik has a hard time sleeping and he takes some very strong sleeping tablets, something that makes Simone despises and adds tension to an already strained relationship. One night, an unknown perpetrator will invade the Bark household and abduct Benjamin after injecting Simone with a powerful sedative drug. Joona will quickly realize that there is a connection between the family murder and Benjamin's abduction and he will have to use his detecting skills to find out the identity and save little Benjamin's life as well as Erik and Simone's marriage.

There are some major differences between the novel and the film especially as far as the plot is concerned, nevertheless, that doesn't mean that the movie doesn't succeed in capturing the source's mood and atmosphere. The performances by the main protagonists are excellent and Tobias Zilliacus is a very fitting choice in the role of Joona as both his physique and expression match the descriptions of him in the books. Mikael Persbrandt is an actor who can play any role with the same offhandedness, while Lena Olin is more than convincing as the despaired, grieving mother who is ready to do anything to get her son back.

The Hypnotist may not be the thriller movie that you will never forget, nevertheless it is a highly entertaining, exciting ride from the beginning until the end. The fans of Lars Kepler will love it and the same is true for the fans of Scandinavian crime/thrillers. Lasse Hallström is one of the most experienced Swedish auteurs and it would be nice if he continued to direct other silver screen adaptations of the Ahndoril duo's work. In these times we live in, we need films that will make us forget what is happening around us and captivate our imagination. Give The Hypnotist a try and you will not regret it.
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2/10
Read the book...read the book instead.
jake_mcaga14 July 2015
Warning: Spoilers
Where to begin? Well, they got it right the first half of the movie. Sort of. After that everything got down hill. I blame in part the director, but mostly the screenwriter has to get the full blow. :-( Paolo messed it up big time. Large and essential parts of the book aren't included in the movie. Which is why the viewer get's the feeling the characters and the story line seems cluttered, kinda superficial and too streamlined. I know it's not easy to trim a book like this into a movie, but this time the screenwriter ruined a potential really good movie.

I'd like to point out that (and here come the spoilers:) the main and essential part of the book is the group hypnotherapy led by Erik, the main character. I'm so tempted to say what happens there but I won't. The second major flaw is everything that led up to the start of the ending. You don't get to see or know why and how they ended up on a desolate farm in the countryside. In the book there are several events leading the story up to this place. What bugs me the most are two simple scenes which they stripped and changed completely. They didn't have to. In the movie, the first crime scene is in a gymnasium. In the book however it's in the adjacent wardrobe. The ending scenes...Good grief. They even managed to change McDonalds to a Thai takeaway. Let alone the final scene which is completely different to the book. So - unless you're dyslectic...Just the read book instead!!! Ending this comment, by changing my vote from 3 to 2. But the book gets a 10 from me.
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6/10
Good and watchable
ShirleyTheSheep31 July 2020
The book is much better, goes into characters much deeper and the story is very well developed. The movie is a weak representation of the book.

If you want a good thriller, read the book.
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5/10
Dark, well-played, exciting, but ends up too far fetched
OJT5 October 2012
Warning: Spoilers
Saw this at the world premiere expecting another Swedish TV-drama, of which the Swedes are so good at making, though I'm a bit bored of the mass production of them. This, however, is directed by Lasse Hallstrom, which I think is an interesting director. Maybe Sweden's best, behind "What's eating Gilbert Grape", "My life as a dog", "The Ciderhouse rules", "Chocolate" and "An unfinished life". Being married to Lena Olin, no wonder he has a good touch directing her.

A viewer watching this film after Watching Danish/Swdish "Broen" (The Bridge") or other recent Nordic crime stories must think Sweden is a dark, moody and dreary winter-Siberia. I didn't read the novel from which this is based upon by the pseudonym Lars Kepler, written by the married couple Alexandra and Alexander Ahndoril. It was a great sales success, but received bland critics.

Nor will I read it after watching this, I can promise, but it surprises me that those reading this in beforehand will have any pleasure seeing this after wards either. The whole story must be given away. Or should I say stories, because it's at least three of them here. That is also some of the films many problems. it seems like the two writers couldn't decide between please and pain, or which story they wanted to tell here.

When that is said, the acting performances are really god. Persbrandt is good, and especially Olin is amazing. A really believable stung housewife losing her child. This is the strongest part of the film.

What ruins this is not the dark feeling, but the story. It's simply not easy to believe so much of this. It all goes over bend a little over half way through the film, and then 134 minutes is too long. I'm sorry to say that you end up waiting for it to end, and worse is that you don't get to know why either. But instead a great ending with a happy family. But what about the meaning of all this? Well, that's down to the script makers.

Not One of Hallstroms best, maybe his worst, as I see that his bottom rating on IMDb after 26 movies is a 30 year old film, rating 5,44.
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7/10
Good suspense
mieriks15 October 2023
Warning: Spoilers
This movie, about a detective who pairs himself with a famous psychologist on a case involving a traumatized young witness to a crime, is a good crime movie!

It was exciting and cold, and the storyline was mostly good. It was hard to guess who the murderer, or murderers, was. That raw and cold mystery and the score set a dark tone, and my attention was focused almost all the time. It's not flawless, and my main complaint is how the suspects were revealed. The first half was interesting, but as soon as we saw Josef's point of view, it went slightly downhill despite that the second half contained some good elements. Josef's murders were the main element that set the plot in motion at first. Then the story changed its focus on the kidnapping of the Bark couple's son, Benjamin, after when Josef had revealed that it was his biological mother, Lydia, who made him kill his current family. Lydia was the true antagonist. What bothered me was that we didn't get to know her enough. Lydia was just another suspect with little impact on the movie's psychology. The third act was quite rushed as well, and the way the investigation was solved left me with mixed feelings. Not overall, but the third act. I just wish we could go much deeper into the mind of Lydia because she got barely any screen time. Anyway, this was mostly a good experience that managed to share its cold story in a suspenseful way.

In conclusion, this is a good suspenseful crime movie with a dark tone. It has some good elements, such as the cold mystery and the score, but it's not flawless. The main complaint is how the suspects were revealed, especially Lydia, who was the true antagonist. The third act was also quite rushed. Overall, it was a mostly good experience that managed to share its cold story in a suspenseful way.
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5/10
Average Swedish crime film with a wasted hypnotism angle
Leofwine_draca14 December 2015
A straightforward Swedish crime thriller starring Mikael Persbrandt, of HAMILTON fame. The story is based on a novel and I'm reliably informed that, as per usual, much of the best material was cut out, leaving this a distinctly average addition to the genre.

The story begins with a brutal massacre in which an entire family are slaughtered by an unknown assailant. The exasperated police then call in a renowned hypnotist in order to bring the sole survivor out of a coma and find out details of the perpetrator. Much is made of the hypnotism angle but truthfully it only occurs a couple of times in the movie and feels rather wasted as an angle.

THE HYPNOTIST suffers from a lack of interesting characters, particularly the investigating detective who's as bland as they come. Lena Olin is incredibly annoying as Persbrandt's harridan of a wife, and only Persbrandt himself retains sympathy for the viewer. The storyline isn't bad, and it does have a sufficiently dark and vicious edge, but director Lasse Hallstrom does a workmanlike job at best and should stick to the insufferable likes of CHOCOLAT.
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8/10
Vastly underrated
jonasnydahl4 May 2019
One of the best Swedish thrillers recent years. I'm normally not a fan of Lasse Hallströms American productions , mostly consisting of romantic dramas. But in this genre he excels, and the movie is up there with the best swedish thrillers and police movies (Mannen på balkongen, Mannen från Mallorca, Falsk som vatten etc.). And more important, this is som much better than all the low brow "Nordic Noir" based on swedish crime novels that has exploded and overflown TV and cinema recent years. I hope Hallström will direct more of the Keppler books, but unfortunatly Hypnotisören was received poorly by both critics and audience in Sweden. They've proparbly got used to the dumbed down stylistics of "Bron", newer "Beck", newer "Wallander" and so on.
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5/10
Unfortunately an implausible and dull Swedish thriller
showdown12 January 2016
Warning: Spoilers
Sorry, this movie was a let-down. It was a totally mediocre, implausible mix of too many different threads. The focus was not on the case, but on the sub-plots. The only positive things about this movie are the cinematography and the showdown, which was fairly thrilling. Even though I usually like the actor Mikael Persbrandt, in this role I found him not authentic. Try to avoid this one and consider my recommendations. I didn't read the book, maybe it's much better than the movie (hopefully).

Recommended movies, which are similar, but far better than this: - Stig Larsson's Millennium-trilogy + US-remake by David Fincher with Daniel Craig and Rooney Mara - The Woman in the Cage/The Keeper of Lost Causes - Most of the Wallander-movies - The witness(es), mini-serial - The bridge I + II

*** Warning: Begin of spoilers ***

  • the hypnosis-scenes: bad, uninspired, boring. - one of the victims is the persecutor: seen so many times, but in a much better way. - the problems in the relationship of Erik and Simone: superfluous. - the story was in total too unbelievable.


*** End of spoilers ***
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4/10
poor book/poor film
mickclarke482 July 2016
Warning: Spoilers
The book in my view is very poorly written-chapter a day formulaic stuff (obviously written by two people) . However the plot, or backstory, as they say these days, is quite interesting.

So to make a film of a poor book with a good plot and ignore the plot to the extent that you have no idea why anybody does anything is frankly ludicrous.

I love Scandinavian noir so could still enjoy the atmospherics,the cinematography and some of the acting but as a coherent whole forget it.

Despite the film having more style than the book I wouldn't recommend this to anyone .
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5/10
Read the book
diogoffernandes9 October 2016
I have read the book first and the film is a little bit disappointing. The characters in the book are much more intense. The unfolding of the plot is not according to the book, which makes certain moments too meaningless and with no connection. All the characters are in the movie but with no light, Joona is just a simple person. I admit I have big expectations because the book is just perfect with a lot of emotion, feeling and suspense. In almost all of the movie I don't feel the thriller or the suspense. I recommend read the book and if you want see the movie but with no expectations. After all, don't miss the books of Joona Lina.
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