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Movie Review: Nightborn

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Nightborn Movie Review by Matt Boiselle

Nightborn – directed by Hanna Bergholm, written by Ilja Rautsi & Hanna Bergholm and starring Seidi Haarla, Rupert Grint & Pamela Tola
Synopsis: In a Finnish forest, Saga and her husband Jon embark on a new chapter as parents, but Saga’s joy is overshadowed by a chilling suspicion about their newborn. Unbeknownst to Jon, causing a rift as she alone grapples with the disturbing truth.
 Following the unsettling brilliance of Hatching, director Hanna Bergholm once again proves she has an uncanny ability to turn the fears of motherhood into deeply unsettling horror. Nightborn isn’t interested in cheap jump scares or over-the-top gore. Instead, it delivers a slow-burning psychological nightmare that gets under your skin and lingers long after the credits roll. Set against the haunting beauty of Finland’s dense forests, the film follows Saga (Seidi Haarla) and her British husband Jon (Rupert Grint) as they begin what should be the happiest chapter of their lives. But after the birth of their son, Saga becomes convinced something is terribly wrong with the baby. As everyone around her dismisses her fears, including Jon, the isolation and uncertainty begin to consume her, forcing viewers to constantly question what’s real and what exists only inside her increasingly fragile mind.

 Seidi Haarla delivers a phenomenal performance, carrying the emotional weight of the entire film. Her portrayal of a new mother trapped between instinct, terror, and self-doubt feels painfully authentic, making every terrifying revelation hit even harder. Rupert Grint shines in a restrained performance as Jon, a husband desperately trying to hold his family together while struggling to understand his wife’s increasingly disturbing behavior. Their chemistry gives the film an emotional foundation that makes the horror all the more effective. Visually, Nightborn is gorgeous. Bergholm transforms the Finnish wilderness into a place that’s simultaneously breathtaking and deeply unsettling. The forests feel ancient and alive, while the isolated family home becomes a prison where paranoia quietly festers. The cinematography embraces long silences and creeping dread, allowing the atmosphere to build naturally instead of relying on constant shocks. What makes Nightborn especially effective is its willingness to explore the darker emotions surrounding parenthood. It tackles postpartum anxiety, fear, guilt, and the overwhelming responsibility of raising a child without ever feeling exploitative. Rather than simply borrowing from classic “evil child” stories, Bergholm uses familiar genre conventions to tell something far more intimate and emotionally devastating.

 The screenplay by Hanna Bergholm and Ilja Rautsi keeps the audience guessing throughout, layering psychological tension with supernatural possibilities in a way that refuses to offer easy answers. Every strange occurrence deepens the mystery while reinforcing the emotional disconnect growing between Saga and Jon. While viewers expecting relentless creature features or nonstop scares may find the deliberate pacing demanding, those willing to surrender to its unsettling atmosphere will discover one of the year’s most emotionally resonant horror films. Like the best psychological horror, Nightborn isn’t simply about monsters lurking in the shadows—it’s about the terrifying possibility that the greatest horror may come from trusting your own instincts when no one else believes you.

Nightborn is an intelligent, beautifully crafted psychological horror film that combines haunting performances, stunning visuals, and emotionally grounded storytelling into an unforgettable meditation on the fears of new parenthood. Hanna Bergholm continues to establish herself as one of horror’s most distinctive modern voices.
The film will have its Shudder premiere on July 31st – make sure to give this one a good look – you won’t be disappointed!

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