Close Menu
Dark Frights
    What's Hot

    LONGLEGS Clip – Finally Caught (2024) Maika Monroe, Nicolas Cage

    May 24, 2025

    DOLLS (2019) Official Trailer (HD) KILLER DOLLS

    May 24, 2025

    BODIES BODIES BODIES Trailer 2 (2022)

    May 24, 2025
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Dark Frights
    • Home
    • Fright Bites

      Spirits On Set: The Haunted Legacy of Voodoo In Films

      May 23, 2025

      KO’s Perspective On The Horror Industry

      May 8, 2025

      SPECIAL DARK FRIGHTS FEATURE (Part One) – Iconic Actor, Writer and Director Oliver Robins Talks Filmmaking, Scary Clowns and Celebrity Crush

      March 19, 2025

      Mothers and Monsters – ‘Little Bites’ From Krsy Fox and Spider One Is A Mother’s Worst Nightmare

      March 1, 2025

      Why Horror Movies Are Drenched in Blood: A Deep Dive into Gore and Fear

      January 30, 2025
    • Books

      Truth Twister By Lydia Graves – Book Review

      April 27, 2025

      Change & Other Terrors By Jim Horlock – Book Review

      April 27, 2025

      New Edition Of Stephen Graham Jones’ MAPPING THE INTERIOR Coming This Spring

      April 26, 2025

      Dark Bloom By Molly Macabre – Book Review

      April 26, 2025

      THE DEFINITIVE HISTORY Is The Ultimate Guide To The 1994 Cult Classic

      April 25, 2025
    • Interviews

      Practical Effects, Easter Eggs, Deleted Scenes & More with ‘Until Dawn’ Director David F. Sandberg [Interview]

      April 26, 2025

      How George A. Romero’s ‘The Amusement Park’ Went from Lost Media to a Graphic Novel [Interview]

      April 26, 2025

      ‘Predator: Badlands’ – Dan Trachtenberg Previews His “Big, Crazy Swing” [Interview]

      April 24, 2025

      ‘Cursed in Baja’: A Love Letter to B-Movies from Director Jeff Daniel Phillips [Interview]

      April 21, 2025

      Exclusive Panic Fest Interview with Director Daniel DelPurgatorio: Marshmallow- In Theaters April 11, 2025

      April 10, 2025
    • Movie & TV News

      The Allure of Haunted Locations

      May 23, 2025

      The Paradox of Horror: Finding Joy in the Shadows

      May 21, 2025

      The Political Implications of Horror Movies. Fear as a Social Mirror

      May 19, 2025

      The Scariest Movie in the World, A Dive into Terror

      May 17, 2025

      Clown Motel 3 Ways to Hell A Nightmare You Can’t Escape

      May 15, 2025
    • Movie Trailers

      LONGLEGS Clip – Finally Caught (2024) Maika Monroe, Nicolas Cage

      May 24, 2025

      DOLLS (2019) Official Trailer (HD) KILLER DOLLS

      May 24, 2025

      BODIES BODIES BODIES Trailer 2 (2022)

      May 24, 2025

      SALEM’S LOT (2024) Official Trailer (HD) REMAKE | Gary Dauberman

      May 24, 2025

      THE EXORCIST: Believer Clip – Bloody Church (2023)

      May 23, 2025
    • Stories & Facts

      Spirits On Set: The Haunted Legacy of Voodoo In Films

      May 23, 2025

      THE CASTING OF GODS

      May 19, 2025

      They’re Already Here: Horror Beyond The Stars

      May 15, 2025

      True Evil: Real-Life Child Killers and Their Reflection In Horror Cinema

      May 12, 2025

      Contagion Or Undead? How Infection Horror Blurs the Line Between Virus and Zombie By Kathleen McCluskey

      May 8, 2025
    • Contact
      • About Dark Frights
      • Privacy Policy
      • Terms and Conditions
      • DMCA / Copyrights Disclaimer
      • Amazon Disclaimer
    Dark Frights
    Home»Movie & TV News»Reassessing ‘Hide and Seek’ 20 Years Later
    Movie & TV News

    Reassessing ‘Hide and Seek’ 20 Years Later

    Horror MasterBy Horror MasterJanuary 15, 2025
    Share the Article Facebook Twitter
    Reassessing ‘Hide and Seek’ 20 Years Later

    hide and seek

    Upstate New York is a beautiful place, especially for a scary story. From Washington Irving’s Legend of Sleepy Hollow to the Quiet Place series, the horror genre’s most visually vivid tales are often told among the Empire State’s many mountains, valleys, rivers, and lakes.

    Into this verdant field falls Hide and Seek, an obscure 2005 thriller starring Robert De Niro, Dakota Fanning, and Elisabeth Shue that turns 20 this month. While it may not be widely remembered today, I have a strong personal attachment to it because I saw it in theaters as a sophomore college student in upstate New York. My Bard College classmates and I openly speculated about the film’s much-ballyhooed twist ending. One of them, the child of a studio executive, explained how 20th Century Fox had distributed prints to theaters without the final reel to avoid leaking spoilers. That strategy ultimately proved wise, as the highly profitable Hide and Seek grossed more than $127 million on a $30 million budget.

    Like most audiences (but unlike esteemed critic Roger Ebert), I too was surprised by the ending. Indeed, my reaction to the finale has shaped my views on critiquing cinema ever since. It’s here that I must post a spoiler alert, as I can’t explain either the underrated greatness of Hide and Seek or my problem with its ending sans revealing the twist.

    The premise of Hide and Seek sees psychologist Dr. David Callaway (De Niro) move to upstate New York with his daughter Emily (Fanning) after both are traumatized from the seeming suicide of their wife/mother Alison (Amy Irving). For most of the movie, we believe they’re being terrorized by Emily’s imaginary friend Charlie, who could be either a supernatural entity or one of the many “strangers” wandering around the neighborhood. Charlie murders the family cat, David’s new girlfriend Elisabeth (Shue), and a nosy sheriff (Dylan Baker). Yet in the end, we discover “Charlie” was actually David all along—or, more precisely, an alternative personality created by David. The film implies he developed dissociative identity disorder (DID) after discovering Alison cuckolding him (he later killed her and faked her suicide).

    All of this paints the reality of DID and living with it in an inaccurate and disparaging light. The diagnosis appears, directly and indirectly, in horror and thriller movies like Identity, Secret Window, My Bloody Valentine, and The Ward. People who have DID possess two or more distinct personalities which can have their own unique names, histories, and characteristics. Usually developed as a coping mechanism for severe trauma, people with DID often suffer from anxiety, depression, memory gaps, self-destructive behavior, and even suicidality. Emphatically, they are no more prone to violence than the rest of the population.

    I was dismayed. Only a few years earlier I had been diagnosed as autistic, and from that day on fiercely identified with the budding neurodiversity movement. It was and still is controversial whether DID should be “officially” deemed a neurodivergent condition, but because people with DID face stigmas as a result of their neurological differences, I argued (and still do) that they deserved the allyship of neurodiverse people regardless of any label.

    When I explained all of this to my fellow Bard students, they agreed with me. Bard had a reputation at the time as America’s most liberal college (I had been labeled “conservative” by some fellow students the previous year for supporting first Joe Lieberman and then John Edwards for president in the 2004 Democratic primaries), and several in the group suggested I write an article in our college newspaper “The Bard Observer” blasting Hide and Seek.

    I decided against it because, despite disliking aspects of the ending, I still enjoyed the movie. While the term “cancel culture” didn’t yet exist as a phrase for ostracizing a person or entity for being problematic, the students still understood the concept. More troublingly, every one of them on the night we saw Hide and Seek agreed that if I felt the ending was ableist, I couldn’t in good conscience recommend the movie.

    Even though I appreciated director John Polson’s ability to capture the feel of upstate New York, enjoyed Ari Schlossberg’s clever script, and thought De Niro and Fanning gave characteristically fantastic central performances, my friends wouldn’t budge. I even observed that Hide and Seek offers layered and realistic portrayals of mental health problems like the trauma of witnessing violence and the trauma of being cuckolded, as well as explores important issues like child abuse and toxic masculinity. My peers remained unmoved.

    Much to my subsequent regret, I ultimately decided not to write the review at all. It just didn’t seem to be worth the trouble. In retrospect, I should have defended the movie’s strong writing, acting, and cinematography, while pointing out my reservations about the conclusion’s implications for people with DID. (Of course, I would have also included a spoiler alert.) Perhaps most importantly, I would have tried to articulate that one can point out how harmful stigmas are perpetuated in works of art while still appreciating their value.

    While I didn’t make that case at the time, I carried the incident with me through my subsequent writing career, especially as a film critic. When I disliked depictions of mental health and neurodiversity in other movies, I tried to strike a balance between calling out the wrong depictions and emphasizing that I was not advocating outright cancelation. I did this when the movie itself was good, such as M. Night Shyamalan’s 2016 thriller Split, and I did it when a picture’s overall quality was as terrible as its science, like with Sia’s 2021 drama Music.

    On the former occasion, I even expressed hope the good movie would have a sequel (which it ultimately did), and on the latter, I wrote of the bad movie that “for all of its faults, I do not get the sense that Sia made this movie with hate in her heart, and therefore I do not see Sia, her collaborators or the movie itself as deserving of the ultimate form of cultural sanction.”

    Although Hide and Seek did not receive “the ultimate form of cultural sanction” (cancellation), it has fallen into obscurity in the two decades since January 2005. More regrettably, it has an abysmal Rotten Tomatoes critics’ score of 12% (50% among the audience), suggesting a poor reputation I consider undeserved. I hope to one day live in a world where both Hide and Seek is ranked alongside the best works of De Niro and Fanning, and characters with DID and other neurological differences are regularly shown in pop culture as three-dimensional protagonists instead of mere ciphers for villainousness and deviance. Since I do not have DID, I will not speculate as to which pop culture samples could serve as examples of positive representations. As an autistic person, however, I continue to struggle to find three-dimensional representations, and I am not alone in feeling this way.

    My views are epitomized by Hide and Seek’s multiple alternate endings. After David is killed and Emily is rescued by his former student Katherine (Famke Janssen), the audience learns in four of the five endings that Emily inherited her father’s DID; the fifth simply shows Katherine and Emily happily walking away from their new home. Of the other four endings, the conclusions only vary from each other in how Emily’s mental illness is revealed. Depending on the version, it’s either shown through Emily residing in a psychiatric ward (there are two versions of this), Emily playing hide-and-seek with her reflection in a mirror, or Emily drawing herself having two heads.

    While the happy ending feels forced, the other four endings all work quite well on an artistic level. They also imply that mental illness and neurodiversity are curses that can be passed along, akin to any other horror genre monster. No matter which one you pick, the good and the bad are inextricably intertwined.

    This is Hide and Seek in a nutshell. One can say that it is also true of the complexity of the human mind, regardless of whether it exists within our own skulls or splattered into the outside world as a work of art.

    Categorized:Editorials

    Sign up for The Harbinger a Dread Central Newsletter

    View Source Link Here

    Share. Facebook Twitter

    Related Posts

    The Allure of Haunted Locations

    May 23, 2025

    The Paradox of Horror: Finding Joy in the Shadows

    May 21, 2025

    The Political Implications of Horror Movies. Fear as a Social Mirror

    May 19, 2025

    Subscribe For Updates TODAY!!

    Get the latest creative news from the Horror Master at DarkFrights.com

    FOLLOW US ON:
    • Facebook
    • Twitter
    • Instagram
    CHECK OUT OUR LATEST…
    ==> ON YOUTUBE <==

    https://www.youtube.com/@DarkFrightsMagazineHorrorNews

    ==> ON REDCIRCLE <==

    https://redcircle.com/shows/33888fce-6d0d-46d4-b976-44fb9e8c441e

    Latest Posts
    Movie Trailers

    LONGLEGS Clip – Finally Caught (2024) Maika Monroe, Nicolas Cage

    By Horror MasterMay 24, 2025

    Official Longlegs Movie Clip & Trailer | Subscribe ➤ https://abo.yt/ki | Maika Monroe Movie Trailer…

    DOLLS (2019) Official Trailer (HD) KILLER DOLLS

    May 24, 2025

    BODIES BODIES BODIES Trailer 2 (2022)

    May 24, 2025

    SALEM’S LOT (2024) Official Trailer (HD) REMAKE | Gary Dauberman

    May 24, 2025

    Spirits On Set: The Haunted Legacy of Voodoo In Films

    May 23, 2025

    THE EXORCIST: Believer Clip – Bloody Church (2023)

    May 23, 2025
    Categories
    • Books (171)
    • Fright Bites (5)
    • Interviews (115)
    • Movie & TV News (418)
    • Movie Trailers (682)
    • Music (4)
    • Stories & Facts (63)
    Archives
    • May 2025
    • April 2025
    • March 2025
    • February 2025
    • January 2025
    • December 2024
    • November 2024
    • October 2024
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    • Home
    • About Dark Frights
    • Contact
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms and Conditions
    • DMCA / Copyrights Disclaimer
    • Amazon Disclaimer
    © 2025 Dark Frights. All rights reserved. All articles, images, product names, logos, and brands are property of their respective owners. All company, product and service names used in this website are for identification purposes only. Use of these names, logos, and brands does not imply endorsement unless specified. By using this site, you agree to the Terms & Conditions and Privacy Policy.

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.