FrightFest 2011 Review: TROLL HUNTER
It may sound like something you'd drunkenly chance upon at a midnight drive-in, but it's a consistently thrilling, surprisingly intriguing creature feature that demonstrates there's still plenty of wiggle room in the found footage subgenre.
rating: 4
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When you read that a film's title is The Troll Hunter, you probably don't begin to expect very much; bargain bin fodder, or at the very most, a low-fi schlock fest with just enough kitschy appeal to secure a theatrical release. Well, leave your prejudices at the door, because this audacious Norwegian monster pic is actually an exceptionally well-produced and somehow rather grounded take on the oversaturated found footage subgenre. Amazingly, director André vredal dares to tell his story with a completely straight face and miraculously manages to get away with it, an admirable feat given the thorough ridiculousness of the film in both name and concept. The Troll Hunter follows a group of students who are making a documentary about a reviled bear poacher operating in rural Norway named Hans (Otto Jespersen). However, when they finally catch up with him, they discover that he is in fact the titular troll hunter, and reluctantly, Hans allows them to follow him and document his work. What makes this film work and distinguishes it from similar efforts is that it is never trying too hard in any one direction; it boasts impressive visual effects for a production of this size but can hardly be called overproduced, the actors are credible while understated, and the film's tone doesn't push too hard to be either overly self-serious or comedic, while still presenting a considered and wholly interesting mythology. Sure, it pulls out plenty of the stock hand-cam bits we've seen better-executed elsewhere, such as night-vision video () and characters running frantically as the camera shakes near-incomprehensibly (The Blair Witch Project and just about everything in between), but the chilly Norwegian setting combined with the fact that, well, it's about trolls in rural Norway, gives it a unique, compelling hook.