Home Is Where the Haunting Is
“The Knocking” (Koputus) begins like every Finnish family reunion: bleak, cold, and full of unspoken trauma. It’s a film where silence has a pulse and grief smells like pine needles. Directed by Max Seeck and Joonas Pajunen, this 2022 supernatural horror drama doesn’t just flirt with dread—it invites it in, offers it coffee, and asks it to stay the night.
The setup is familiar: three siblings return to their childhood home deep in the woods to settle their parents’ estate. But instead of fond memories and old toys, they find bloodstains, whispers, and a forest that seems to have taken out a restraining order against sanity. The movie doesn’t rely on cheap jump scares. Instead, it marinates you slowly, like a corpse left too long in the Scandinavian frost.
Siblings, Secrets, and Something in the Woods
Mikko (Pekka Strang) is the stoic older brother trying to pretend that unresolved trauma can be bulldozed like the family home. Maria (Inka Kallén), the eldest sister, wears her grief like a sharp suit—controlled but ready to stab. And then there’s Matilda (Saana Koivisto), the youngest, who once spent her childhood locked in a cage because mom and dad had… unconventional parenting methods.
They’ve returned to this decaying house not out of nostalgia but obligation—the kind of family duty you perform while praying no one finds the skeletons. Unfortunately, the forest has other plans. Every sound—the creak of the floorboards, the gust through the trees—feels like a memory clawing back to life.
The knocking of the title isn’t just a horror trope; it’s the sound of guilt, repression, and the past demanding rent. Each thud reminds the siblings that while you can bury your parents, you can’t bury what they did—or what they made you become.
A Forest That Breathes, Bleeds, and Judges
The cinematography is gorgeous in that specific Nordic way—icy, symmetrical, and deeply unsettling. Every frame looks like it should hang in a gallery titled Depression in Natural Light. The forest isn’t just a backdrop; it’s a character, watching, whispering, and occasionally nudging the plot forward with unseen hands.
The camera lingers on branches that resemble veins and fog that creeps like cigarette smoke. The forest isn’t scary because of what’s in it—it’s scary because it’s alive. You half expect the trees to lean in and start gossiping about the siblings’ secrets.
This is where Seeck and Pajunen flex their mastery of atmosphere. They understand that true horror doesn’t need monsters when human memory is already doing the heavy lifting.
Performances: Grief as a Group Activity
The cast deserves a standing ovation—or at least a nervous clap. Inka Kallén’s Maria radiates quiet intensity; she’s the kind of woman who’d organize a séance with a spreadsheet. Pekka Strang’s Mikko is the embodiment of Finnish masculinity—emotionally constipated but quietly unraveling. And Saana Koivisto’s Matilda steals every scene with a haunting innocence that feels like a wound you can’t quite look at.
Together, the trio creates an emotional triangle so tense it could power the Finnish national grid. Their interactions drip with suppressed rage and affection, like siblings who’ve long stopped hugging but can’t stop hurting.
Even the supporting cast—the ghostly parents and the mysterious old lady—feel plucked from a fairy tale written by someone who hates happy endings.
The Horror of Remembering
What separates The Knocking from standard haunted-house fare is its moral ambiguity. The horror doesn’t come from the supernatural but from the realization that evil may have been homegrown. The parents’ mysterious fate and the children’s fractured memories form a psychological labyrinth where truth and madness share a bunk bed.
The film’s sound design is impeccable. Every knock, whisper, and distant creak feels like it’s coming from inside your skull. The soundtrack doesn’t tell you what to feel—it dares you to feel anything at all.
The pacing is deliberate, almost cruelly so. Some might call it slow-burn; others might call it “Nordic time dilation.” But by the time the puzzle pieces click together, you realize the directors weren’t just telling a ghost story—they were dissecting trauma under a microscope smeared with dirt and blood.
A Horror Movie With a Hangover
What makes The Knocking great isn’t that it scares you. It’s that it lingers. Like the smell of wet earth or the memory of a bad childhood, it follows you long after the credits roll. You’ll think twice about walking into the woods again—or calling your siblings.
There’s dark humor hidden in its melancholy, too. Every moment of dread has a whisper of absurdity—like realizing that the forest might hate you less than your own family. It’s horror therapy by way of existential dread.
In another life, this could have been a comedy: three emotionally damaged adults trying to renovate their childhood home while battling trauma and timber spirits. It’s Fixer Upper meets The Witch. But The Knocking never winks at the audience—it keeps its poker face, and that’s what makes it powerful.
The Verdict: Knock Knock, Who’s There? Your Repressed Trauma.
“The Knocking” isn’t a film for everyone. If you like your horror loud and your villains visible, this one might feel like watching a storm through thick glass. But for those who appreciate subtlety, mood, and the slow suffocation of psychological dread—it’s a masterpiece.
Seeck and Pajunen have crafted a film that’s both haunting and humane, where the supernatural is just a symptom of the emotional disease called family. It’s beautiful, it’s brutal, and it’ll make you want to call your therapist—or your mother.
In the end, The Knocking reminds us of an uncomfortable truth: sometimes, the scariest thing about going home is realizing it’s still inside you.
Rating: 9/10 — Because in this house, even the silence knocks back.

