Hidden or The Hidden can refer to:
- L'Encobert (in Catalan; El Encubierto in Spanish; "The Hidden "), a mysterious rebel leader in the Revolt of the Brotherhoods in Valencia in 1522
- Hidden, also known as Caché, a 2005 French drama film
- Hidden (2009 film), a 2009 Norwegian horror film
- Hidden (album), a 2010 album by British group These New Puritans
- Hidden (Torchwood), a Torchwood spin-off audiobook
- Hidden (TV series), a 2011 BBC television drama
- The Hidden (film), a 1987 science fiction/horror film
- The Hidden (novel), a 2006 suspense novel by Kathy Mackel
- The Hidden (game developer), a defunct British game developer
- The Hidden (video game), a modification to the computer game Half Life 2
- The Hidden (Animorphs), the thirty-ninth book in the Animorphs series by K.A. Applegate.
- "The Hidden" (The Penguins of Madagascar episode), an episode of The Penguins of Madagascar
Famous quotes containing the word hidden:
“Yet there is a mystery here and it is not one that I understand: without the sting of otherness, ofeventhe vicious, without the terrible energies of the underside of health, sanity, sense, then nothing works or can work. I tell you that goodness-what we in our ordinary daylight selves call goodness: the ordinary, the decentthese are nothing without the hidden powers that pour forth continually from their shadow sides. Their hidden aspects contained and tempered.”
—Doris Lessing (b. 1919)
“Art for arts sake? I should think so, and more so than ever at the present time. It is the one orderly product which our middling race has produced. It is the cry of a thousand sentinels, the echo from a thousand labyrinths, it is the lighthouse which cannot be hidden ... it is the best evidence we can have of our dignity.”
—E.M. (Edward Morgan)
“While it may not heighten our sympathy, wit widens our horizons by its flashes, revealing remote hidden affiliations and drawing laughter from far afield; humor, in contrast, strikes up fellow feeling, and though it does not leap so much across time and space, enriches our insight into the universal in familiar things, lending it a local habitation and a name.”
—Marie Collins Swabey. Comic Laughter, ch. 5, Yale University Press (1961)