The Orphanage
By Mitch Emerson
January 11, 2008 - 12:41
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Starring: Belén Rueda, Fernando Cayo, Roger Príncep, Geraldine Chaplin, Montserrat Carulla (II)
Directed By: Juan Antonio Bayona
Produced By: Guillermo del Toro, Mar Targarona, Álvaro Augustin
Genre: Art/Foreign, Suspense/Horror and Thriller
Running Time: 1 hr. 45 min.
Release Date: December 21st, 2007 (wide)
MPAA Rating: R for some disturbing content.
Distributors: Picturehouse
My rating: 9/10 (Only because I don't like subtitles, lol)
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A quick review for
a movie that really needs to be seen in order to believe just how
good it is,
The Orphanage is by far the scariest movie I have
seen in a long, long time. Director Juan Antonio Bayona takes his
cues from producer Guillermo Del Toro using the same dark fantasy
storytelling that was prevalent in Del Toro's
Pan's Labyrinth,
making me wonder if Del Toro pulled a
Poltergeist and had more
to do with the film than we are led to believe, just as Steven
Spielberg “lent a helping hand” to Tobe Hooper in directing
Poltergeist.
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For once there is
a movie where the performances take a backseat to the story itself,
which is a good thing, because as with
Pan's Labyrinth, it is
hard to judge an actors ability when you can't speak their language.
You don't get the cadence and tone and inflection that we use to
judge the actors ability to project emotion. On the other hand, a
performance can also be graded on body language and the ability to
express emotion with your eyes, and that is how I judged the actors
in
The Orphanage. We spend most of the movie with Belén
Rueda, who plays Laura. She carries the film well as a distraught
mother who knows her son is still alive. Her anguish comes across
quite clearly as she knows what to do, but not how to do it. While
Fernando Cayo,as Laura's husband, has a few scenes where you can see
in his eyes how much he cares for Laura and how helpless he feels
because he doesn't know how to help her while in other scenes, it
seems he's just going through the motions.
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Until Guillermo Del Toro and Clive Barker collaborate,
keep reading
Mitch Emerson
mitch@comicbookbin.com
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