The Den (2013 film)

The Den (released in some countries as Hacked) is a 2013 American slasher film by Zachary Donohue and his feature film directorial debut.[2][3] The film was first released in Russia on December 23, 2013,[4][5] and was given a simultaneous limited theatrical and VOD release on March 14, 2014 through IFC Midnight. It stars Melanie Papalia as a young woman who discovers a murder via webcam.[6] The film is shot as a computer screen film.

The Den
Russian language film poster from initial release
Directed byZachary Donohue
Written byZachary Donohue
Lauren Thompson
StarringMelanie Papalia
Matt Riedy
David Schlachtenhaufen
Music byEvan Goldman
CinematographyBernard Hunt
Edited byJoseph Pettinati
Production
company
Cliffbrook Films
Onset Films
Distributed byIFC Midnight
Release date
  • December 23, 2013 (2013-12-23) (Russia)
  • March 14, 2014 (2014-03-14) (United States)
Running time
81 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Budget$500,000 (estimated)[1]

Plot

The movie begins with Elizabeth logging into a webcam-based social media site known as The Den, which allows users to chat with random strangers across the world, similar to Chatroulette. For her graduate project in sociology, she proposes to chat with as many strangers as possible and calculate how many meaningful conversations she can accumulate. The graduate board reluctantly gives her a grant, with the help of Sally, one of her friends on the graduate board pushing for her approval. She spends the next few months continuously chatting with strangers, much to the chagrin of her boyfriend, Damien, and friends Jenni and Max. Though most of her chats are quickly ended due to sexual content or scams, she accumulates plenty of data and is optimistic about the outcome of the project.

While chatting with strangers with Jenni, Elizabeth encounters a woman whose webcam appears to be broken. The stranger reacts aggressively to Jenni when Elizabeth is away from the webcam, and Jenni logs off. Afterwards, Elizabeth's account is hacked, and her webcam is repeatedly turned on without her permission. The stranger attempts to chat with Elizabeth again the next day while she is in a coffee shop, but logs off quickly when another customer approaches the webcam. That night, Damien surprises Elizabeth by showing up to her home in the middle of the night, and Elizabeth's hacked webcam records the couple having sex before the hacker sends the video to Elizabeth's graduate board.

Later, Elizabeth is prompted to chat with the stranger again; the stranger reveals that they witnessed Elizabeth having sex, and later their webcam turns on and reveals the account holder bound and gagged before being murdered by a masked man. Elizabeth is shaken and immediately takes the video of the murder to the police, who acknowledge that it appears genuine but advise her that such snuff films are usually faked, and there is little they can do about it. Though Elizabeth later stumbles upon a disturbingly realistic depiction of a death during a game of Russian roulette that turns out to be faked, and her friends (including Max, who is a computer scientist) insist that it is a hoax, she remains unconvinced and is determined to solve the murder. However, both the police and other users of The Den turn out to be unhelpful. When she enlists Max to hack the account to see where it originated, he finds that it has been routed through countless proxies, and is untraceable.

Damien is abducted while chatting with Elizabeth, who has her back turned at the moment of his kidnapping and does not realize he is missing until she receives a bizarre call from his computer, showing his house completely empty. Though Elizabeth implores the police to investigate, they tell her that there is nothing that they can do. Meanwhile, Jenni is lured to Elizabeth's house by the hacker, who pretends to be Elizabeth and abducts her when she arrives. While harried from trying to find a way to reach Damien, Elizabeth receives an angry call from Sally, informing her that the video of her and Damien having sex was sent to the entire graduate board. Sally does not believe Elizabeth when the latter insists she was hacked, and informs her that her grant is suspended until further notice. Later, while trying to reach Jenni, Elizabeth is lured to her house, where she finds the power cut. Seeing water flooding from the bathroom, Elizabeth enters to find Jenni in the bathtub, her wrists slashed in an apparent suicide attempt. Though Jenni is alive when Elizabeth finds her, she dies soon after, and Elizabeth finds a suicide note emailed to her, ostensibly from the hacker posing as Jenni.

Elizabeth is further shaken when she receives a message showing the attackers stalking and entering a home owned by Lynn, Elizabeth's pregnant sister. Though Elizabeth notifies the police and calls Lynn to warn her, the message is garbled. The attackers bind Lynn and prepares to cut open her stomach, but abruptly leave, hiding the camera as they do so. Later, when the house is surrounded by police, one of the attackers returns and picks up the camera, revealing that they are either part of law enforcement or posing as a police officer. The attacker fixates on the father of Lynn's child, who she is separated from, irritating her. The attacker leaves and gets into a car and follows Elizabeth back to her home, where she is packing in preparation to keep her sister company. She receives a chat request from Max, which shows the lead detective entering Max's house, only to be murdered. Elizabeth calls for help from the officer guarding her, but she finds him murdered as well. She is attacked by a hooded figure hidden in her closet, but she stabs him repeatedly and flees, only to be apprehended by another hooded attacker outside.

Elizabeth awakens in a room of a nightmarish, abandoned complex, chained to a wall with a GoPro stapled to her forehead. A computer is in the room, forcing her to chat with the abducted Damien, who informs her that there are many other attackers. She is also shown a recorded video of Max being strangled with plastic wrap by the killers. Damien is then beaten and taken away to presumably be killed off-screen. Afterwards, another hooded man enters the room with Elizabeth, preparing to kill her, but she overpowers him and strangles him with her chain. Unlocking her shackles with his keys, she attempts to escape the dark complex, armed with a discarded hammer. She is chased by a number of killers, one of whom is a young man who she attacks, demanding to know where Damien is; he tells her that he is not there. She manages to escape to above ground, bludgeoning other attackers before hijacking one of their cars, but crashes when blindsided by another member's car; she is removed from the wreck by the killers and dragged back to the complex.

The film cuts to another woman, Brianne, on The Den who chatted with Elizabeth at the start of the project. Much like Elizabeth's first interaction with the killers, she is lured to chat when one of the attackers pretends Elizabeth's webcam is broken. Brianne then views a recording of Elizabeth being hanged almost to death and then shot in the head by the killers. It is then revealed that the video of Elizabeth's death is also being viewed by a man surfing a website that features snuff film "narratives" of victims lured by killers exploiting The Den, and is preparing to pay for Brianne's "narrative" before being interrupted by his young son.

Cast

  • Melanie Papalia as Elizabeth "Liz" Benton
  • David Schlachtenhaufen as Damien
  • Adam Shapiro as Max
  • Anna Margaret Hollyman as Lynn Benton
  • Matt Riedy as Sgt. Tisbert
  • Katija Pevec as Jenni
  • Saidah Arrika Ekulona as Sally
  • Anthony Jennings as Officer Dawson
  • Victoria Hanlin as Brianne

Reception

On Rotten Tomatoes, The Den has a rating of 76% from 21 critics with an average of 6.28/10.[7] Metacritic gives the film a weighted average of 48/100 based on 6 critics, indicating "mixed or average reviews."[8] Fearnet gave The Den a positive review, commenting that it "starts out a little rocky but if you're not completely fed up with 'found footage' filmmaking by now and you're willing to give a non-traditional visual presentation a fair shot, The Den has some pretty compelling things to say about the alleged safety of the internet."[9] We Got This Covered also praised the movie, stating that it "[executed] on a strong gimmick at a speedy, flowing pace."[10] In contrast, Shock Till You Drop panned the movie as it felt that it "lacks true scares, awesome kills or even the routine flash of nudity to warrant any sort of viewing. It panders a silly and over exaggerated message of the dangers of the anonymity of the internet and the “nature” of people. It uses a silly plot to carry a ridiculous camera technique and delivers nothing but angst and irritation."[11] Fangoria criticized the film for many of the same reasons, as it felt that the movie began on a strong note but became "inauthentic and irritating" after the film depicted "Almost everyone, online or not, responds to [the main character's troubles] with immediate hostility or disbelief."[12]

See also

References

  1. IMDB The Den (2013) Box office/Business
  2. Woods, Kevin. "IFC Midnight acquires Zachary Donohue's The Den". JoBlo. Retrieved 18 February 2014.
  3. Gingold, Michael. "Enter "THE DEN" via webcam chiller's new trailer". Fangoria. Retrieved 18 February 2014.
  4. "смерть в сети". Megacritic (in Russian). Retrieved 21 February 2014.
  5. "Правда жизни". 5TVR (in Russian). Retrieved 21 February 2014.
  6. "IFC Midnight Acquires Rights to Zachary Donohue's High-tech Horror 'The Den'". IndieWire. Retrieved 18 February 2014.
  7. "The Den (2017)". Rotten Tomatoes. Fandango Media. Retrieved June 10, 2020.
  8. "The Den (2014)". Metacritic. CBS Interactive, Inc. Retrieved June 17, 2017.
  9. Weinberg, Scott. "FEARNET Movie Review: 'The Den'". Fearnet. Retrieved 18 February 2014.
  10. "The Den Review". We Got This Covered. Retrieved 28 February 2014.
  11. Larsen, Ryan. "Review: There's No Reason to Check into The Den". STYD. Retrieved 21 February 2014.
  12. Zimmerman, Samuel. ""THE DEN" (Movie Review)". Fangoria. Retrieved 21 February 2014.
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