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ARTS AND CULTURE

Ensnared by sex abuse paranoia

  • 02 May 2013

The Hunt (MA). Director: Thomas Vinterberg. Starring: Mads Mikkelsen, Thomas Bo Larsen, Annika Wedderkopp, Lasse Fogelstrøm,  Susse Wold. 116 minutes

This excellent Danish film is difficult to write about in the context of the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse. One of the most unpalatable aspects of such abuse cases, notably within the Catholic Church, is the way in which the word and wellbeing of perpetrators has seemed at times to be given precedence over those of their young victims. No one would doubt that the reverse should be true.

Yet on the surface The Hunt appears to be a cautionary tale about the consequences of vigilance succumbing to paranoia. It centres on small-town kindergarten teacher, Lucas (Mikkelsen), whose life falls apart after he is wrongfully accused of abusing a young female student. To the viewer he is clearly a victim of persecution, and yet his persecutors' actions are based simply on the fact that they have taken an alleged victim at her word.

Well, in a way. His 'accuser', Klara (Wedderkopp), is a sensitive and imaginative child, confused by the emotions of a pre-adolescent crush on her kind and handsome teacher. Her comments are first misconstrued and then blown out of proportion by genuinely concerned and well-meaning adults. She is the daughter of Lucas' best friend Theo (Larsen) and so gets a front seat view of the subsequent fallout in Lucas' life.

We are entirely sympathetic to Lucas, but also to Klara, who intended no harm, had no inkling of the damage she would set in motion and, once the destruction begins to unfold, is powerless to stop it; the adults in her life are as slow to accept her retractions as they were fast to accept her 'accusations'. The film is exceptional in its sensitive and nuanced treatment of Klara and her responses.

I have seen The Hunt twice — once at last year's Melbourne International Film Festival, and again at a recent media preview — and both times could not deny the outrage and sense of injustice felt on behalf of Lucas, and those few who are loyal and unlucky enough to stand by him (including his until-recently estranged teenage son, played by Fogelstrøm). What makes the film difficult though is that it is hard to apportion blame for the injustice.

After all, the town's adults are guilty only of wanting to protect their children. It is Lucas' senior colleague at