Thale Blu-ray Movie

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Thale Blu-ray Movie United States

Blu-ray + DVD
XLrator | 2012 | 78 min | Not rated | Apr 23, 2013

Thale (Blu-ray Movie)

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Movie rating

6.5
 / 10

Blu-ray rating

Users0.0 of 50.0
Reviewer3.5 of 53.5
Overall3.5 of 53.5

Overview

Thale (2012)

Two forensic clean-up men discover a mythological siren hidden in the basement of a remote cabin in the Norwegian woods.

Starring: Morten Andresen, Erlend Nervold, Silje Reinåmo
Director: Aleksander Nordaas

Horror100%
Foreign14%
ThrillerInsignificant
FantasyInsignificant
MysteryInsignificant

Specifications

  • Video

    Video codec: MPEG-4 AVC
    Video resolution: 1080p
    Aspect ratio: 1.78:1
    Original aspect ratio: 1.85:1

  • Audio

    Norwegian: DTS-HD Master Audio 5.1
    English: Dolby Digital 2.0 (192 kbps)

  • Subtitles

    English, English SDH

  • Discs

    25GB Blu-ray Disc
    Two-disc set (1 BD, 1 DVD)
    DVD copy

  • Playback

    Region free 

Review

Rating summary

Movie4.0 of 54.0
Video4.0 of 54.0
Audio3.5 of 53.5
Extras0.5 of 50.5
Overall3.5 of 53.5

Thale Blu-ray Movie Review

Beautiful Beast

Reviewed by Michael Reuben April 17, 2013

Among young directors working today, few can match Norwegian Aleksander Nordaas' credentials as a genuine auteur. Planting himself firmly in the Robert Rodriguez tradition of do-it-all-yourself moviemaking, Nordaas wrote, directed, co-produced, shot, decorated the set for, and edited his feature film Thale, which took three years to complete and debuted at Norway's Bergen International Film Festival in January 2012. After playing the Toronto Film Festival the following fall, Thale was picked up for distribution by XLrator Media, which showed it briefly in theaters in March before a general release on Blu-ray and DVD the following month.

Thale is a fine example of minimalist fantasy, utilizing a small cast and a few locations for all they're worth and suggesting much more than it actually shows. Some viewers have complained that the film takes too long to get to the point, but Nordaas has constructed his story so that the journey is more interesting than the destination. How often can that be said of the usual studio fare?

Nordaas' inspiration for Thale was the Norwegian legend of the "huldra", a kind of forest sprite that appears in the shape of a beautiful woman with long hair and a cow's tail. To the man who encounters her, the huldra can be either lucky or spiteful, and sometimes both. Around this ancient lore, Nordaas built a contemporary story that can be sketched only in broad outlines without major spoilers. The following account must be, of necessity, brief.


Leo (Jon Sigve Skard) and Elvis (Erlend Nervold) do the messy job of forensic cleanup. As anyone who saw Sunshine Cleaning will recall, this is specialized work that requires a strong stomach—which Elvis lacks entirely. He pukes constantly at the revolting sights that greet the pair on each job. (Even though these putrid scenes are shown only in short bursts, I don't recommend Thale for mealtime viewing.) Even though Elvis seems unsuited to the work, Leo still employs him. One gets the sense that they've known each other for a long time.

One day, as Elvis is retching over the remains of an elderly woman, Leo receives a call directing the pair to a remote cabin for a job the following day. When they arrive, they find about half the body of an old man scattered about, presumably by wild animals, with the other half unaccounted for. It is Elvis who notices a subterranean opening inside a separate structure and, against Leo's advice, insists on investigating. The aperture leads down some steps into an underground set of rooms, where the pair discovers empty and expired canned goods, extensive tools and lab equipment, an old refrigerator that appears to be still running and a collection of cassette tapes with dates from the early 1980s. The tapes contain cryptic dictations from a man who is presumably the cabin's former occupant, along with strange vocalizations they can't identify.

Eventually, Leo and Elvis also find a frightened, naked and exceptionally strong young woman they believe to be called "Thale", based on what they've heard on the tapes. She says nothing, but appears to understand them. She also seems to recognize the voice on the recordings. Gradually, Leo and Elvis discover that Thale has additional abilities, as well as a few features not typically found on a young woman.

Meanwhile, the idyllic surroundings of the lakeside locale are the scene of ever more questionable events. Mysterious figures race through the forest, closing in on the cabin for unknown purposes. We catch glimpses of some of these figures when Leo goes outside to make phone calls and get supplies from his truck, and they do not look quite normal. There are other presences we're aware of only from their point-of-view shots. Just as Leo and Elvis are expecting help and aid from Einar, the individual who sent them to the cabin, he calls to say that he's been "delayed". They're stuck in the middle of nowhere with Thale and each other—and whoever else is out there.

Nordaas knows how to exploit multiple varieties of paranoia: fear of tight spaces filled with strange objects, fear of a vast forest teeming with unknown forces, fear of the confidences that even your friends keep from you, fear of our own weaknesses (like Elvis' delicate stomach), fear of ruthless forces operating in the shadows, fear that the flash in the corner of your eye may be more than a trick of the light. The antidotes in Thale turn out to be remarkably square and old-fashioned: kindness, generosity, loyalty to friends and family and, most of all, true love.




Thale Blu-ray Movie, Video Quality  4.0 of 5

Definitive information on Thale's shooting format was not available, but the appearance is obviously that of digital video. To my eye, it appeared to be high-end consumer-grade equipment rather than a professional system such as the Arri Alexa or one of the Red cameras, but the result on XLrator's 1080p, AVC-encoded Blu-ray is a satisfyingly clean and detailed image with reasonably solid blacks and well-saturated primary colors in scenes that are fully lit. In the many scenes in the underground rooms, a sickly yellow or green cast tints everything, because the illumination is poor, and the effect contributes to the sense of claustrophobia and danger. The images of the surrounding forest in the outdoor scenes are breathtakingly detailed and beautiful, but also forbidding in their sense of isolation and coldness.

The film's running time is short, and the only extra is a trailer. At an average bitrate of 28.77 Mbps, compression artifacts are not an issue.


Thale Blu-ray Movie, Audio Quality  3.5 of 5

The sophistication of Thale's sound editing is demonstrated not by showy surround effects, but by the careful layering and alternation of the dialogue (and breathing) of the two main characters with the various sounds that issue from the recorded tapes they find in the abandoned cabin basement, as well as the otherworldly sounds that issue from Thale herself. In outdoor scenes, there are distant (and also nearby) rustlings that pass quickly through the sound field and are meant to have an unsettling effect. A sequence near the end that cannot be described without spoilers has been carefully edited to converge the sounds of two scenes occurring simultaneously into one aural event. All of this sound work has a natural and effective presence on the Blu-ray's DTS-HD MA 5.1 track, which includes the original Norwegian dialogue. I presume the dialogue is clearly conveyed but do not have the linguistic knowledge to form an independent judgment. An English dub track is available in Dolby Digital 2.0, but when I sampled it, I found the voices wholly unsuitable to the characters of Leo and Elvis.

The sparse musical accompaniment is credited to Raymond Enoksen and Geirmund Simonsen, who have extensive credits in Norwegian TV.


Thale Blu-ray Movie, Special Features and Extras  0.5 of 5

The disc's only supplement is the film's theatrical trailer (1080p; 1.78:1; 2:00). At startup, the disc plays trailers (in 1080p) for The Thompsons, Bigfoot: The Lost Coast Tapes and Outpost: Black Sun. These can be skipped with the chapter forward button and are not otherwise available once the disc loads.


Thale Blu-ray Movie, Overall Score and Recommendation  3.5 of 5

Thale is the kind of film that enthuses reviewers and often disappoints fans of horror and fantasy. It's a low-budget effort with a minimalist aesthetic, and it works primarily at the level of suggestion and character interaction. But its creator has put a lot of thought into what he wants to achieve, and that's a rare thing in contemporary filmmaking, which too often is more interested in dazzling the senses than engaging the mind. When you can't throw money at the screen, you're forced to be inventive, and people like Nordaas who do it well are a rare and valuable find. Highly recommended.