Durante la ricerca di documenti nazisti in una fattoria austriaca, un team di esperti scopre un segreto nascosto. L'espatriato americano Gunner S. Holbrook diventa ossessionato dalla soluzio... Leggi tuttoDurante la ricerca di documenti nazisti in una fattoria austriaca, un team di esperti scopre un segreto nascosto. L'espatriato americano Gunner S. Holbrook diventa ossessionato dalla soluzione del mistero.Durante la ricerca di documenti nazisti in una fattoria austriaca, un team di esperti scopre un segreto nascosto. L'espatriato americano Gunner S. Holbrook diventa ossessionato dalla soluzione del mistero.
- Regia
- Sceneggiatura
- Star
- Premi
- 3 vittorie e 10 candidature totali
Otto Zucker
- Wolfgang Zinggl
- (filmato d'archivio)
Recensioni in evidenza
"No mice, dicks, or feelings were hurt in the making of this film" (a quote from the film's credits)
... I am not sure that the last one is true.
Watched as part of SoHOME Horror Fest 2024
I was very wary going into this film as I was worried that it would be too heavy a topic for a stormy Friday night home alone... but I found myself quickly becoming engaged with the twisting plot and its strange happenings. The whole film left me feeling very unsettled though and even the euro-beat music over the credits couldn't cheer me.
This film will work its way inside you like an endoscopic camera.
... I am not sure that the last one is true.
Watched as part of SoHOME Horror Fest 2024
I was very wary going into this film as I was worried that it would be too heavy a topic for a stormy Friday night home alone... but I found myself quickly becoming engaged with the twisting plot and its strange happenings. The whole film left me feeling very unsettled though and even the euro-beat music over the credits couldn't cheer me.
This film will work its way inside you like an endoscopic camera.
"Solvent" is not just another found-footage horror film. It is a bodily, architectural, and psychological collapse seen through the invasive eye of a borescope. This inspection camera becomes the film's central aesthetic tool, crawling through moldy walls, rusted pipes, and organic cavities. The effect is grotesquely intimate: closer to "Tetsuo: The Iron Man" than to anything in conventional found footage.
Where "Sinister" blends analog textures into digital unease, "Solvent" assembles a chaotic visual collage of historical footage and documentary-style POV, always returning to the borescope's unnerving perspective. This is no gimmick. It is the film's formal and narrative spine, reshaping how we perceive both space and character. The soundscape evokes the sonic dread of "Berberian Sound Studio," while Pieter de Graaf's score steadily escalates the tension toward a terrifying conclusion.
Where "Sinister" blends analog textures into digital unease, "Solvent" assembles a chaotic visual collage of historical footage and documentary-style POV, always returning to the borescope's unnerving perspective. This is no gimmick. It is the film's formal and narrative spine, reshaping how we perceive both space and character. The soundscape evokes the sonic dread of "Berberian Sound Studio," while Pieter de Graaf's score steadily escalates the tension toward a terrifying conclusion.
A striking mix of psychological horror and raw gore that tackles Austria's dark past head-on. The story centers on Holbrook, an American retrieval expert obsessed with finding hidden Nazi documents in a crumbling farmhouse. As his mind begins to unravel, he encounters an ancient evil tied to Austria's lingering wartime guilt.
Adding a personal edge, the film was shot entirely on director Johannes Grenzfurthner's actual grandfather's abandoned farm. This hauntingly real setting, along with family photos portraying the sinister Wolfgang Zinggl and his grandson, brings a disturbing authenticity to the already eerie story.
Adding a personal edge, the film was shot entirely on director Johannes Grenzfurthner's actual grandfather's abandoned farm. This hauntingly real setting, along with family photos portraying the sinister Wolfgang Zinggl and his grandson, brings a disturbing authenticity to the already eerie story.
The real star here is the film's atmosphere: dank, claustrophobic, and crawling with unease. Gries' portrayal of a man unraveling under the weight of history is haunting, and the film's surreal visual language amplifies its themes of guilt and repression. A bold, provocative take on the consequences of buried (and current) atrocities, Solvent challenges us to confront the past with a grotesque honesty rarely seen in cinema.
The film's POV style immerses viewers in a sense of dread that builds gradually, pulling us deeper into the protagonist's crumbling psyche. As we watch his unraveling, the lines between personal guilt and collective responsibility blur, creating a powerful commentary on how societies often suppress their darkest moments. The meticulous attention to detail in the sound design and cinematography creates an almost tactile experience.
Solvent doesn't offer easy answers; instead, it forces the audience to sit with discomfort, asking us to question our own complicity in systems of repression. Gries' performance is a masterclass in subtlety, conveying a man at war with himself, while the film's disturbing imagery stays with you long after the credits roll. It's a visceral, uncompromising work that defies genre expectations, leaving an indelible mark on both the horror and psychological thriller landscape.
The film's POV style immerses viewers in a sense of dread that builds gradually, pulling us deeper into the protagonist's crumbling psyche. As we watch his unraveling, the lines between personal guilt and collective responsibility blur, creating a powerful commentary on how societies often suppress their darkest moments. The meticulous attention to detail in the sound design and cinematography creates an almost tactile experience.
Solvent doesn't offer easy answers; instead, it forces the audience to sit with discomfort, asking us to question our own complicity in systems of repression. Gries' performance is a masterclass in subtlety, conveying a man at war with himself, while the film's disturbing imagery stays with you long after the credits roll. It's a visceral, uncompromising work that defies genre expectations, leaving an indelible mark on both the horror and psychological thriller landscape.
Dropping just days before Austria's election, Solvent, directed by Johannes Grenzfurthner, couldn't feel more relevant. The country is dealing with the alarming rise of the far-right FPÖ in the lead-up to the general election on September 29. Oskar Deutsch, President of the Israelitische Kultusgemeinde (IKG) Wien, has raised the alarm about the party's connections to nationalist Burschenschaften (fraternities) with ties to Nazi ideology. His warning that the FPÖ's growing success feels "threatening to many" casts a dark shadow over the film's eerie dive into history and guilt.
Solvent centers on Gunner S. Holbrook, an American expat played by Jon Gries, who gets caught up in a twisted hunt for Nazi documents in an old Austrian farmhouse. As Holbrook spirals deeper into his obsession with uncovering hidden evils, the farmhouse (chosen by Grenzfurthner for personal reasons) becomes a metaphor for Austria's messy, shattered past. Holbrook's descent into madness is a reflection of a society still struggling to deal with its own historical Gepäck (baggage).
Grenzfurthner amps up the horror with grotesque body transformations and intense psychological tension, making for a film that's as terrifying as it is symbolic. Holbrook's twisted metamorphosis symbolizes how unaddressed guilt and silence can warp both individuals and societies. Pieter de Graaf's haunting score adds to the creepy atmosphere, while the practical effects hit hard with a gritty, visceral feel.
With its themes of guilt, memory, and authority, Solvent is hitting home at a time when Austria is dealing with a resurgence of political extremism and disturbing new waves of anti-Semitism. It's a bold and artistic response to the fears hanging over Austria right now, reminding us all of the dangers that come with ignoring history.
Solvent centers on Gunner S. Holbrook, an American expat played by Jon Gries, who gets caught up in a twisted hunt for Nazi documents in an old Austrian farmhouse. As Holbrook spirals deeper into his obsession with uncovering hidden evils, the farmhouse (chosen by Grenzfurthner for personal reasons) becomes a metaphor for Austria's messy, shattered past. Holbrook's descent into madness is a reflection of a society still struggling to deal with its own historical Gepäck (baggage).
Grenzfurthner amps up the horror with grotesque body transformations and intense psychological tension, making for a film that's as terrifying as it is symbolic. Holbrook's twisted metamorphosis symbolizes how unaddressed guilt and silence can warp both individuals and societies. Pieter de Graaf's haunting score adds to the creepy atmosphere, while the practical effects hit hard with a gritty, visceral feel.
With its themes of guilt, memory, and authority, Solvent is hitting home at a time when Austria is dealing with a resurgence of political extremism and disturbing new waves of anti-Semitism. It's a bold and artistic response to the fears hanging over Austria right now, reminding us all of the dangers that come with ignoring history.
Lo sapevi?
- QuizSome of the pipe shots were taken in the plumbing system of Castle Leopoldskron in Salzburg, the filming location of "The Sound of Music."
- Curiosità sui crediti"No mice, dicks, or feelings were hurt in the making of this film."
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Dettagli
- Tempo di esecuzione
- 1h 34min(94 min)
- Colore
- Proporzioni
- 16:9 HD
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