The New York Times by A.O. Scott
The Orphanage, a diverting, overwrought ghost story from Spain, relies on basic and durable horror movie techniques.
✭ ✭ ✭ ✭ Read critic reviews
Spain · 2007
Rated R · 1h 45m
Director J. A. Bayona
Starring Belén Rueda, Fernando Cayo, Roger Príncep, Mabel Rivera
Genre Drama, Horror, Thriller
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Laura brings her family back to her childhood home, a former orphanage. While settling in, her son begins to communicate with a group of invisible friends, something Laura chalks up to an active imagination, until her son disappears and a mischievous masked child starts wreaking havoc in the house.
The New York Times by A.O. Scott
The Orphanage, a diverting, overwrought ghost story from Spain, relies on basic and durable horror movie techniques.
The Orphanage's joys come from the experiential: Bayona's cultured technical skills, including some phenomenal sound design, and sustained anxiety. It's about as healthy as junk food gets.
Los Angeles Times by Carina Chocano
An unexpectedly poignant ghost story.
A great horror movie is like a good shrink--and a lot cheaper, too. It purges us through petrification. That horror movie, thankfully, has arrived. It's called The Orphanage," and it is seriously scary.
A fastidiously grim ghost story that rattles the bones of the haunted-house genre and finds plenty of fresh (but not too bloody) meat.
TV Guide Magazine by Maitland McDonagh
The filmmakers know the tropes of spooky movies: Glowering shadows, squeaking playground equipment, eerie storms and half-glimpsed forms, but the film rests on Rueda's subtle, intense performance, rooted in every half-articulated anxiety that ever gnawed at a parent's brain.
There’s not really a bogeyman in The Orphanage and not much blood; just insane intensity and a building sense of bad vibes.
Chicago Tribune by Michael Phillips
As in “Pan’s Labyrinth,” The Orphanage relies on a risky blend of clinically realistic horrors and poetic suggestions of an alternate world, one that can be visited, but at a price.
While some of the trappings and even some of the plot elements could easily be called unoriginal, Bayona and screenwriter Sergio G. Sánchez arrange them in a fresh way, crafting an emotionally resonant, nerve-jangling experience.
The Hollywood Reporter by Richard James Havis
This Spanish supernatural thriller begins interestingly and finishes intriguingly. But what lies between drags because the film lacks a driving story line.
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