Hanna (2011)
TOMATOMETER
AUDIENCE SCORE
Critic Consensus: Fantastic acting and crisply choreographed action sequences propel this unique, cool take on the revenge thriller.
Hanna Videos & Photos
Movie Info
Hanna (Saoirse Ronan) is 16 years old. She is bright, inquisitive, and a devoted daughter. Uniquely, she has the strength, the stamina, and the smarts of a soldier; these come from being raised by her widowed father Erik (Eric Bana), an ex-CIA man, in the wilds of North Finland. Erik has taught Hanna to hunt, put her through extreme self-defense workouts, and home-schooled her with only an encyclopedia and a book of fairy tales. Hanna has been living a life unlike any other teenager; her… More
Rating: | PG-13 (for intense sequences of violence and action, some sexual material and language) |
Genre: | Mystery & Suspense, Action & Adventure |
Directed By: | Joe Wright |
Written By: | David Farrar, David Farr, Seth Lochhead |
In Theaters: | Apr 8, 2011 Wide |
On DVD: | Sep 6, 2011 |
Box Office: | $40.2M |
Runtime: |
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Cast

as Hanna

as Marissa

as Erik

as Sebastian

as Rachel

as Isaacs

as Sophie

as Burton

as Johanna Zadeck

as CIA Tech 1

as Lewis

as Walt

as Bob

as Head of Ops

as Monitor

as Camp G Doctor 1

as Camp G Doctor 2

as False Marissa

as Miles

as Moroccan Hotel Owner

as Titch

as Razor

as Danish Policeman

as Feliciano

as Feliciano's Brother

as Katrin Zadeck

as Knepfler

as Johanna Zadeck
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LoginCritic Reviews for Hanna
All Critics (212) | Top Critics (44) | Fresh (151) | Rotten (61) | DVD (10)
Meticulously composed mayhem without a larger purpose, too glum to provide any base genre satisfactions.

not terrible, but not great

It's like an amusement park ride operating in the middle of a rave in which The Chemical Brothers provide a no-one-gets-out-alive thrust of unimpeded propulsion.

Jason Bourne meets Run Lola Run in a movie that brings terrifying new meaning to 'child abuse'.

"A furious neck-snapping thriller that summons up memories of a dozen other movies and manages to improve on most of them."

Teenage assassin trained as a killing machine since birth? Unless your movie has Nicolas Cage dressed like Batman with a paedo-tache, you're fighting a losing battle from the start.

Audience Reviews for Hanna
One can't but feel sorry for Hanna - who's whole reason for being is to avenge her mother's murder.
Super Reviewer
The most underrated action film of the last decade.
Super Reviewer
Mixing together the fetish details of fairy tales and the rogue Euro-friendly devices of action films, "Hanna" is a deceptively overdone genre of film that gives a few groans and a few shudders. The premise of the film is enticing, framing a young girl (Ronan), outlawed by society and made to be a weapon of destruction by her father (Bana) in the German wilderness. She has no social queues, no indicators of normality, and also fights with complete loyalty towards her father. There's a larger conspiracy at work between her father and several secret government organizations. We only get a taste for what this conspiracy is, in the first twenty minutes of the film, which spurs the action and drives the characters intuitions. The face of the evil organization is Agent Marissa Heller (Blanchett) a mysterious woman who seems to have an unbreakable tie to Hanna and her father. She hunts them down, and we're not completely sure whether or not she really is the evil entity that Erik (Bana) supposes, until we're farther into the film. Instead of being a cat and mouse tete a tete, the film mostly follows Hanna as she adjusts to a wandering life, often co-mingling with an Australian family on holiday. Her interactions with the children and parents take up a large section of the film, and she rarely has to fight the gang of assassins that tail her. Near the end the events turn very whimsical, and that's where everything kind of melts down. The fantasy elements are intriguing: a prophetic, special girl, who looks very predatory and yet fairylike in appearance. A father who is overly protective and keeps her hidden in the woods. A pulse pounding soundtrack over all the action, and fantastical settings, including an abandoned park, serve to remind us of the underlying sentiments of the film. Ronan is amazing as Hanna, giving very little exposition, and yet portraying a feral young girl trying to cope with the instability of her situation. Blanchett is creepy in her role, malevolent as a Disney villain, and yet enjoys a complexity that never gets explained. Marissa Heller is the one part of the story that never gels. We're not sure if she cares for Hanna, or wants revenge, or even why she ultimately stalks her like prey. There's definitely a seedy element to her character that isn't covered by governmental status, and yet it ends with emotional dependence on the young girl. The ending feels stale and useless compared to the rest of the film, and that's because we're unsure of who Heller ultimately is. This film uses its elements effectively, and has a certain style and tone, but it doesn't have a very useful or interesting plot.
Super Reviewer
Hanna Quotes
Isaacs: | I like giving people what they want. |
Rachel: | I love the countryside. The city stifles me. Emotionally. Creatively. Spiritually. Places like this bring us closer to god. |
Rachel: | Well, not in any monotheistic sense. Buddha, Krishna, the 'God Within'. Whatever you believe in. What do you believe in, Hanna? |
Sophie: | Is 'kraut' an ethnic slur? Like 'queer' or 'lesbo'? I think I'd quite like to be a lesbian. |
Hanna: | Come and find me. |
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