LONDON - Time Out Review


Hider in the House

108 mins, 1989, Color
Average user rating

Review

From Time Out Film Guide

When Tom Sykes (Busey) is released from an institution some 20 years after murdering his sadistic parents, all he wants is a family and a home.

Obsessively pragmatic, he installs himself into a newly refurbished house, building a secret room behind a false wall in the loft. By the time the Dryers take up residence, all the rooms are bugged and Sykes has his own entry.

Adopting this 'perfect' family, he finds himself increasingly involved in family affairs: cowering like the kids when the parents argue, and then taking an overtly Oedipal role, manoeuvering the father (McKean) out of the picture and introducing himself to the mother (Rogers) as a friendly neighbour.

Accept the unlikely premise (director Patrick puts economy over plot exposition), and you'll find a tense psychological suspense film which cannily explores family politics with sour wit and distinctly macabre conclusions.

It's a very promising debut from Patrick, resisting the overt violence of the horror movie in favour of uneasy intimacy and intelligent characterisation. Rogers and McKean are first-rate, but Busey in particular has seldom been better employed, his hulking physique a reminder of the tragic monsters of movie yore, immensely threatening but intrinsically vunerable.

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Ha ha, nothing like needlessly tooting your own horn.

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Damn right. Someone has to, so I suppose it has to be me.

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Just to be clear, what I meant by "needlessly" was that your film has gotten very good reviews in general and is considered by those of us who are fans of such films to be one of the better movies made for a TV broadcast. Personally, I rate it highly and it took me quite a while to get the laserdisc version for my LD collection. I think you can be rightly proud of your direction.

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