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Hush

  • 2008
  • Not Rated
  • 1h 31m
IMDb RATING
6.0/10
7.4K
YOUR RATING
William Ash in Hush (2008)
A young couple on a motorway journey are drawn into a game of cat and mouse with a truck driver following a near accident.
Play trailer2:01
3 Videos
40 Photos
HorrorThriller

A young couple on a motorway journey are drawn into a game of cat and mouse with a truck driver following a near accident.A young couple on a motorway journey are drawn into a game of cat and mouse with a truck driver following a near accident.A young couple on a motorway journey are drawn into a game of cat and mouse with a truck driver following a near accident.

  • Director
    • Mark Tonderai
  • Writer
    • Mark Tonderai
  • Stars
    • William Ash
    • Christine Bottomley
    • Andreas Wisniewski
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.0/10
    7.4K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Mark Tonderai
    • Writer
      • Mark Tonderai
    • Stars
      • William Ash
      • Christine Bottomley
      • Andreas Wisniewski
    • 41User reviews
    • 25Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 1 nomination total

    Videos3

    Hush
    Trailer 2:01
    Hush
    Hush (2009)
    Clip 1:20
    Hush (2009)
    Hush (2009)
    Clip 1:20
    Hush (2009)
    Hush (2009)
    Clip 1:06
    Hush (2009)

    Photos40

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    + 35
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    Top cast22

    Edit
    William Ash
    William Ash
    • Zakes Abbot
    • (as Will Ash)
    Christine Bottomley
    Christine Bottomley
    • Beth
    Andreas Wisniewski
    Andreas Wisniewski
    • The Tarman
    Claire Keelan
    Claire Keelan
    • Wendy
    Stuart McQuarrie
    Stuart McQuarrie
    • Thorpe
    Robbie Gee
    Robbie Gee
    • Chimponda
    Peter Wyatt
    Peter Wyatt
    • Mr. Coates
    Sheila Reid
    Sheila Reid
    • Mrs. Coates
    Shaun Dingwall
    Shaun Dingwall
    • PC Mitchall
    Rupert Procter
    • Dad
    • (as Rupert Proctor)
    Carol Allen
    • Mum
    Harry Mondryk
    • Dash
    Tobias Adams-Heighway
    • Drummer Boy
    Dasiy Mondryk
    • Girl
    Allison Saxton
    Allison Saxton
    • Woman in Loo
    Janet Greenwood
    • Cleaner
    Sade Stewart
    • Shop Assistant
    George Beach
    • Trevor
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Mark Tonderai
    • Writer
      • Mark Tonderai
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews41

    6.07.4K
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    Featured reviews

    7hitchcockthelegend

    Starry starry night!

    Hush is written and directed by Mark Tonderai and stars William Ash, Christine Bottomley, Claire Keelan and Stuart McQuarrie. Music is by Theo Green and cinematography by Philipp Blaubach.

    Warring young couple Zakes (Ash) and Beth (Bottomley) are driving up a dark and rain-soaked M1, when all of a sudden a grime covered truck swerves in front of them and the tail-gate lifts briefly to reveal a caged woman in the back. It signals the start of a fight for survival for the pair of them......

    The setting is suitably bleak, anyone who has had cause to be on a rainy British motorway at night knows how mind-numbing it can be. Even the stops at the service stations serve as mundane experiences, where the staff are on auto-pilot and other patrons are zombie like in the banality of their routines. Into the fray are a young couple who are on the cusp of breaking up (though Zakes in that macho way is ignorant to this fact), this is where Hush manages to rise above merely being a horror picture cobbled together from bits of other genre pictures. It examines how a fractured relationship reacts to a terrifying reality thrust into their lives, and with barely half a dozen principal characters in the story, this clearly isn't going to be a psycho truck driver movie that sees the antagonist offing a number of dim-wits with gory care-free abandon.

    Director Tonderai has done an impressive job with such limited resources, there's a realistic tense atmosphere brought out by the low budget. His staging of certain scenes really grab the attention, with a container base set cat and mouse sequence of events truly breath holding stuff. He doesn't compromise the pace of the movie with pointless filler, it's a standard three tiered horror structure (meet the principals/put them in peril/do or die finale), but the film always remains honest to its core ideas, with Zakes reacting to his various predicaments in a way that is not beyond the realms of reality. There's also some nice camera touches (under carriage tracking shot) and smart use of appliances (light sensors), so why is Hush not more loved and lauded?

    Fact is, is that hardened horror fans from the last twenty years will not be able to get away from that old familiar feeling of deja vu. From the cat and mouse on asphalt core story, to scenes such as a toilet hide out, there's territory that has been well trodden in better movies. There's a couple of twists, one that genuinely surprises, but one which is so telegraphed it annoys greatly. Then there is the use of the hand-held camera, which has become a staple requirement, it seems, of fledgling horror directors. Here it is used to dizzying great lengths, so much so it grows tiresome entering the last third and had this particular viewer wondering if the contents of his stomach was about to unload! There's also, perhaps inevitably, some implausibilities that are likely to test the patience of some.

    Undeniably it has flaws and struggles to shake them off at times, but the good far outweighs the bad here. And given the small budget and fresh ideas the writer/director puts into what is becoming a stagnated formula, Hush is actually something of a small triumph and well worth seeking out if you are stuck for a tension pumped thriller. 7/10
    7Filmnerd1984

    Brooding British Thriller!

    better than expected British thriller about a mad man in a truck abducting girls. Zakes Abbot discovers this one night when he drive behind the Psycho's truck. is it better to leave it be? or get involved? hell soon find out the consequences of his decision. the last 20 minutes of the film , i found myself yelling at the screen saying "be quiet", "stupid woman" and "moronic dog". decent acting by the lead and superbly directing for first timer Mark Tonderai. the film could have easily be 30 minutes longer, especially since there was a few questions i wanted answered. the lack of these answers is the only reason i gave "Hush" a 7 in stead of an 8.
    5aqos-1

    Average

    This movie was mediocre. It had some interesting parts, but after a while, it got a bit long winded. Essentially, a couple is on a trip. She feels that their relationship is going nowhere and that her boyfriend is not following through with any of his life plans. She is trying to tell him something and when she feels she can't get her message across, she parts ways with him. During the trip they he sees what appears to be a nude girl locked in the back of a semi truck. Where he and his girlfriend part ways, the truck turns up. The man realizes that his girlfriend has been kidnapped and sets off to find her and rescue her. He runs into a few pitfalls along the way, some drama and death ensues. It gets pretty typical. Not a bad movie, but no the best I've ever seen either.
    Tipster101

    Decent, but not spectacular.

    "Only you saw it. Only you can save them" the tagline reads. This is more or less the theme of this British thriller. Zakes Abbot (William Ash) spots something rather disturbing on the road, a woman caged in the back of a van, and has a dilemma of whether to follow and help or shrug it off as someone else's problem. After a small effort of calling the police and attempting (and failing) to read the dirty number plate, Zakes chooses the latter. That is until his girlfriend goes missing and he realises he has a more personal stake in pursuing the captor.

    What follows is a fairly straight-forward cat & mouse chase as Zakes tails and evades the villain simultaneously, bringing to mind the 2003 French thriller High Tension (AKA Switchblade Romance) which as you might expect with that title is essentially one long suspense sequence. The tension in Hush doesn't quite allow it such a cocky title as the French film, but it is a good attempt nonetheless and it provides a few "No don't go there!" or "He's behind you!" moments. The film does however contain almost all the horror clichés, and although it tries to subvert one or two, this is nothing new and horror fans will see everything a mile off. As far as the plot goes, it would have been acceptable as a simple chase-thriller if it weren't for one scene (involving the security guards) which just seemed unnecessary and too contrived even for this already improbable story. Still, at 90mins it's an easy, enjoyable thriller that's worth a watch.
    7sanjaywrightus

    Duel meets Wolf Creek

    Having been one of the lucky ones to have spent considerable time on UK motorways at night (and specifically the M1) I was immediately intrigued by the locale for this debut horror from Mark Tonderai. For me the originality of setting alone sets this horror apart from the countless tired horror locations: the haunted house, the woods, the abandoned hospital, etc, etc.

    Overall the film is a fairly nuts-and-bolts by-the-numbers horror, which deserves credit for the originality of locale, decent performances, slick direction, with a few genuinely tense set-pieces (particularly the final showdown set-piece, which stands clearly above the rest). However, it is fairly unambitious with character detail (after the opening argument), and there are a few of the usual (and easily avoidable) horror clichés - we even get the hiding in the toilet cubicle sequence (albeit with a slight variation).

    You get the sense that Tonderai had his set-up and finale worked out fairly early on but didn't know what to do with the story in between. The central third, while featuring a few decent scenes with the police, takes a couple of left turns into co-conspirator territory, alluding to a networked operation. The scenes with the security guards and the 'escaped' girl feel like they were put in to fill time and up the body count rather than deepen the story as a whole. Personally I felt that a more stripped-down lone bad-guy approach would have been strong enough.

    The film owes something to Spielberg's 'Duel' in theme and narrative drive (no pun intended), and there are similarities in tone to the marginally superior Australian horror 'Wolf Creek'

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    Related interests

    Mia Farrow in Rosemary's Baby (1968)
    Horror
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    Thriller

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Goofs
      When Zakes is looking for Beth in the service area, he crawls under a lorry in the lorry park in the pouring rain, in the next scene inside the service area, he appears clean and dry, surely he would be covered in oily marks.
    • Quotes

      Zakes Abbot: [goading the Tar-man outside] Remember me you CUNT!

    • Crazy credits
      After the coda, credits start appearing. After the producer credits, an epilogue is shown, of one of the criminals (obviously uncaught) shopping at a bookstore, and picking up a book by the protagonist describing the criminal operation and its end. We then see him getting into one of storage trucks like the one seen earlier in film and drive way from a series of similar looking vehicles.
    • Connections
      Featured in House at the End of the Street (2012)
    • Soundtracks
      Knock Down
      (K Gee Heat Remix)

      Written by Alesha Dixon

      Performed by Alesha Dixon

      Published by Universal Music Publishing Ltd, Warner/Chappell Music Ltd and Xenomania Songs Ltd

      Courtesy of Polydor Ltd

      Under licence from Universal Music Operations

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    FAQ16

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • March 13, 2009 (United Kingdom)
    • Country of origin
      • United Kingdom
    • Official site
      • Official site
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Giấc Mộng Kinh Hoàng
    • Filming locations
      • Sheffield, South Yorkshire, England, UK(on location)
    • Production companies
      • Film4
      • Warp X
      • UK Film Council
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • £1,000,000 (estimated)
    • Gross worldwide
      • $288,667
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 31m(91 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1

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