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The Changeling

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Canada · 1980
Rated R · 1h 47m
Director Peter Medak
Starring George C. Scott, Trish Van Devere, Melvyn Douglas, John Colicos
Genre Horror

Not long after the death of his own wife and child, a professor discovers the house he's staying in during his getaway is haunted by a vengeful spirit, whose murder remains unsolved. In order to save himself from the specter's wrath, the man must try to solve the murder before it's too late.

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What are critics saying?

40

Time Out by

The leaps made by Scott's agile mind in identifying both victim and usurper leave logic and credence on the starting block.

75

The Associated Press by Bob Thomas

Scott lends credibility to the far-fetched happenings, and director Peter Medak manipulates the standard scare tactics with skill. [07 Mar 1980]

80

Newsweek by David Ansen

The word for The Changeling is chilling. Medak doesn't pummel the audience with gore and Exorcist-type shock tactics. More than once, he raises real goose bumps using nothing more extraordinary than a bouncing rubber ball. [31 Mar 1980, p.82]

70

Washington Post by Gary Arnold

Happily, director Peter Medak is aware of the fundamental absurdity of his ghost story. In fact, he's taken considerable care to compensate with virtuoso displays of scenic and atmospheric suggestiveness. The Changeling has a stylistic gusto and polish that were conspicuously missing from The Fog and The Amityville Horror. [28 Mar 1980, p.F1]

75

The Globe and Mail (Toronto) by Jay Scott

The Changeling is a breathless, enjoyably scary amusement-park ride through an aged genre that comes back more often than Frank Sinatra; and that appears to be as pleased with itself, and as well-preserved. [28 Mar 1980]

83

The A.V. Club by Nick Schager

An underrated entry in the horror subgenre, generating consistent unease through long, ominous pans—up and down staircases, through hallways—that assume the perspective of its searching-for-peace specter.

63

Chicago Sun-Times by Roger Ebert

It doesn't have that sneaky sense of awful things about to happen. Scott makes the hero so rational, normal and self-possessed that we never feel he's in real danger; we go through this movie with too much confidence.

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