Los Angeles Times by Kenneth Turan
The Silence is an exemplary German-language thriller, a complex and disturbing examination of guilt, violence and psychological torment that chills us to the core not once but two times over.
Critic Rating
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Director
Baran bo Odar
Cast
Ulrich Thomsen,
Wotan Wilke Möhring,
Katrin Sass,
Sebastian Blomberg,
Burghart Klaußner,
Oliver Stokowski
Genre
Crime,
Thriller
13-year-old Sinikka disappears on a hot summer night, with her bicycle as the only trace. It's found in the same spot where a girl was killed 23 years ago. The investigation of Sinikka's disappearance forces those involved in the original case to face their past, and may solve both mysteries.
Los Angeles Times by Kenneth Turan
The Silence is an exemplary German-language thriller, a complex and disturbing examination of guilt, violence and psychological torment that chills us to the core not once but two times over.
NPR by Ella Taylor
What you'll carry away is the film's austere sympathy for the struggles of its benighted characters and its bleak conviction that justice and resolution mostly happen in movies.
Village Voice
Making his feature debut, Swiss-born writer/director Baran bo Odar has turned Jan Costin Wagner’s 2007 novel The Silence into a taut, beautifully acted thriller.
Total Film
In his feature debut, Swiss director Baran bo Odar counterpoints the tranquillity of the landscape with the mental torment of everyone involved, and what could have been just another serial-killer whodunit becomes a complex study of grief, obsession and the persistence of guilt.
Time Out by David Fear
As a macro- to micro-exploration of guilt—over giving in to sexual deviancy, its use as a psychological crutch or as something that keeps grief from transforming into closure — The Silence speaks volumes.
The New York Times by A.O. Scott
[Mr. Odar] allows the story to unfold at a deliberate pace, emphasizing the psychological nuances of the mystery rather than its procedural details, and using graceful wide-screen compositions and haunting sound design to create a compelling mood of menace, anxiety and sorrow.
The A.V. Club by Mike D'Angelo
From moment to moment, The Silence can feel a bit pokey, as it divides its attention among a host of characters and never builds up much urgency about the fate of the second victim, whose body hasn’t been found.
Slant Magazine by Andrew Schenker
The slightly dour tone is the perfect backdrop for the director to skillfully weave together his varied narrative strands in a surprisingly entertaining medley.
Salon by Andrew O'Hehir
In the end The Silence is more like an intriguing work of misdirection than a great crime film, but it has a dreamlike and disturbing undertow you won’t soon forget, and Odar is unquestionably a director to watch.
New York Post by Farran Smith Nehme
Director Baran bo Odar puts all this in the service of ghastly clichés. The rape of children has long since grown nauseatingly familiar, in books, in films, in each season of “Law & Order: Special Victims Unit.”
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