Hen – Ravenously hungry and quietly evil

Review

07/10/2025

From the very first shot that lights up the screen, the tone of Hen is unsettling. Dawid (Stian Bam) is busy drawing water from a well. The camera looks up from inside the well at Dawid as he removes the planks one by one to reach the water. The black-and-white imagery is not only stripped of colour, but it also exposes a raw malevolence as this story from the pen of Nico Scheepers begins to find its rhythm.

Dawid and Hanna (Amalia Uys) find themselves in what appears to be the late nineteenth century, on a desolate farm where their faith is the only anchor against an unyielding landscape filled with dust, silence, and loneliness. Like the emptiness surrounding them, the dialogue in Hen is sparse because the images speak louder—and by the end, they scream. On one of Dawid’s trips to the well, he comes across a gruesome scene: five people lie torn apart under a tree. Jackals? Dawid wonders, but this makes no sense. In the middle of the bodies stands a coffin, and inside it Dawid finds a frightened, starving child.

Dawid decides to take Lukas—portrayed with masterful subtlety by newcomer Dawian van der Westhuizen—back to the farm. It is then that a dark shadow begins to move across the mountains and plains, and over Dawid and Hanna themselves.

Without giving too much away, Hen recalls horror classics like The Omen (1976) and, to some extent, Roman Polanski’s Rosemary’s Baby (1968). The film’s magnetic pull lies in Scheepers’s ability to avoid the clichés of the horror genre at all costs. There are no jump scares and very little music. When a record spins on the turntable of a gramophone, the viewer can almost feel the supernatural doom creeping in. It’s precisely the silences in Hen that make the hairs on your neck rise—along with Lukas’s eyes: hollow and cursed.

The strange and bizarre happenings slowly creep closer to the farm, gradually changing Dawid and Hanna, until the story reaches a shocking yet strangely full-circle conclusion—one that drifts away like a tumbleweed down a dusty road.

Like Donkerbos, Scheepers proves once again with Hen that he has a gift for the supernatural, the eerie, and the macabre. He knows how to frighten with very little. Stian Bam and Amalia Uys are excellent as the tormented souls, but it’s Dawian van der Westhuizen as Lukas who will fuel your nightmares.

Viewers can be sure of one thing: after the end credits roll, they will never look at chickens the same way again.

Production Information

Running Time

138 min

Writer and Director

Nico Scheepers

Website

Screens

s

Age Restriction

18

Cast

Dawian van der Westhuizen, Amalia Uys, Stian Bam, Marelize Viljoen, Anoecha Kruger

Rating

4.5/5

Box Office

See NFVF

Written by Gerhard Ehlers

Gerhard Ehlers is a film and television production lecturer at the Boston Media House campus in Sandton, Johannesburg. Gerhard has always seen himself as a storyteller, and already in high school, he wrote the scripts and directed three independent short films, namely: “Friendly Conscience”, “Die Heuningwyser” and “Sekelfontein”.

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