Bayona successfully bathes his film in a very similar, Pan's Labyrinth ambience and generally proves himself a skilled acrobat in negotiating the material's triteness.
The Orphanage (2007)
Tomatometer
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Reviews Counted:149
Fresh:128
Rotten:21
Average Rating:7.3/10
Consensus: When it seems like every horror movie nowadays is a remake or a grisly exercise in sadism, The Orphanage is a breath of fresh air for critics and audiences alike, seamlessly blending in a poignant tale of loss with the scares and blood.
Theatrical Release:21-03-2008
Synopsis: It might come as no surprise that the producer of the Spanish supernatural thriller THE ORPHANAGE is none other than Mexican director Guillermo Del Toro (PAN'S LABYRINTH, THE DEVIL'S BACKBONE), for... It might come as no surprise that the producer of the Spanish supernatural thriller THE ORPHANAGE is none other than Mexican director Guillermo Del Toro (PAN'S LABYRINTH, THE DEVIL'S BACKBONE), for his influence is felt greatly throughout the picture. Made by an entire crew of newcomers--director Juan Antonio Bayona, screenwriter Sergio G. Sanchez, director of photography Oscar Faura, composer Fernando Velazquez--THE ORPHANAGE is an extremely accomplished work. The story concerns Laura (Belen Rueda), who has returned with her husband Carlos (Fernando Cayo) and adopted child Simon (Roger Princep) to the large manor where she was raised in an orphanage as a child. Laura is determined to fix up the abandoned house and open it as a refuge for ill children. But from the moment she returns, the past begins to haunt her. It isn't long before she begins to see the children who she used to play with as a seven-year-old. And when Simon goes missing one afternoon, she's convinced that they have taken him hostage. What follows is a murky descent into Laura's mind, where she doesn't know what is real and what is a figment of her tortured imagination. Bayona brings Sanchez's complex script to life with the help of Faura's haunting imagery and Valazquez's atmospheric score. But what makes THE ORPHANAGE an even greater achievement is its insistence on being more than just a superficial scare-fest. Bayona and Sanchez are more interested in deeper themes of memory, loss, and grief, establishing Laura as a mother who feels guilt over not being able to protect her child from outside forces. The result is a film that is both unsettling and moving. [More]
Starring: Belen Rueda, Fernando Cayo, Geraldine Chaplin
Starring: Belen Rueda, Fernando Cayo, Geraldine Chaplin
Director: Juan Antonio Bayona
Director: Juan Antonio Bayona
Screenwriter: Sergio G. Sanchez
Producer: Guillermo Del Toro
Composer: Fernando Velazquez
Studio: Picturehouse
Reviews for The Orphanage
Belén Rueda, the film's star, is that rare woman in her 40s who is allowed to look naturally beautiful, with the lines of a woman in her 40s (even though she's playing a character who is 37).
This is the worst sort of horror film, one that cloaks its shameless pulls at the heartstrings in overemphatic sound design, hyped-up visuals, and a tear-streaked lead performance by Belen Rueda.
A spectacular entry into the horror thriller genre, The Orphanage twists and turns and gives the audience some truly scary and sorrowful moments.
an often chilling story that never sags and ultimately supplies a surprisingly moving ending that marries life and death, past and present
The historical details and enthralling magic of Guillermo del Toro's own productions are missing, and it's more reliant on boo scares than its somber story can support. Yet an intriguing subtext, fierce lead performance and a perfect ending make it work.
At once mother and child, victim and antagonist, space and inhabitant, Laura is remarkable, but also traumatized and unnerving.
Poltergeist meets The Others in a satisfying story about what you believe... You'll never watch children playing "Red Light, Green Light" the same way again.
The kind of movie that reminds horror fans why they became hooked on the genre in the first place.
In Spanish with subtitles, this magical, mystical tale seems anointed somehow with Del Toro's thick atmospheric elixir that served Pan's Labyrinth, Del Toro's unsettling Oscar-winner of last year.
Unfortunately, the script lacks the artistry necessary to marry horror and drama.
The Orphanage is a thinking person's ghost story. It builds slowly and pays off stunningly.
The Orphanage contains jolts and gruesome moments. But most of the time, the film unsettles in quieter, more encompassing ways, its horrific qualities derived from implication instead of imagery.
As if more proof were needed that the best way to make a scary movie is through atmosphere, pacing and storytelling, rather than sudden violence, needless gore and random shocks, here comes The Orphanage.
What makes this bleak thriller, the feature debut by Juan Antonio Bayona, not like [other horror movies]? Partly, it is an ambiguous sense of portent that clarifies itself by growing more opaque.
The movie is so good at using its horror elements to explore deeper, less fantastical emotions. For all its bump-in-the-night suspense, The Orphanage is ultimately as much about motherhood and grief as it is about apparitions and shadowy corridors.
The Orphanage works in large part because [the filmmakers] create horror through a slow tightening of tension rather than with lurid "gotcha!" moments. And because in Rueda they have a compelling and heartbreaking leading lady.
Latest News for The Orphanage
August 05, 2009:
Fessenden Signs on for Orphanage Remake ![]()
New Line's remake of "The Orphanage" has got itself a director: Larry Fessenden, who has written the script with producer Guillermo del Toro. More...
May 15, 2009:
Orphanage Duo Reunites for "Powerful Story" ![]()
Juan Antonio Bayona and Sergio Sanchez, the director and screenwriter of "The Orphanage," are reteaming on what looks set to be Bayona's second film. More...
March 12, 2009:
Bayona Set for Third Twilight Movie ![]()
Summit Entertainment has announced that Spanish director Juan Antonio Bayona ("The Orphanage") will direct "Eclipse," the third installment in the "Twilight" series. More...
November 14, 2008:
Five Favorite Films with Guillermo del Toro
RT caught up with Hellboy II director Guillermo del Toro at the DVD/Blu-ray Launch Event for Hellboy II: The Golden Army, where the celebrated fantasy auteur shared his favorite... More...
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