The Orphanage

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http://www.latinoreview.com/filmpreview.php?id=882

Release Date:
March 28, 2008

Starring: Montserrat Carulla, Fernando Cayo, Geraldine Chaplin, Andrés Gertrúdix, Roger Príncep, Mabel Rivera, Belén Rueda
Director(s): Juan Antonio Bayona
Screenplay: Sergio G. Sánchez

Synopsis

Laura returns to the house where she was raised and decides to transform it into an orphanage. Soon, her son, Simón, makes an invisible friend...

It's produced by Guillermo Del Toro and you can see a trailer here:

http://www.clubcultura.com/clubcine/clubcineastas/guillermodeltoro/elorfanato/

Some Stills

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So how many roles does Doug Jones have in this one!
 
Ok ........

Sack head kid is freaking me out!!
 
http://www.shocktillyoudrop.com/news/reviewsnews.php?id=1262

Reviews
The Orphanage
Reviewed by: Edward Douglas
Rating: 9 out of 10
Movie Details: View here

Cast:
Belén Rueda as Laura
Fernando Cayo as Carlos
Geraldine Chaplin as Aurora
Montserrat Carulla as Benigna
Mabel Rivera as Pilar
Andrés Gertrúdix as Andrés
Roger Príncep as Simón

Directed by Juan Antonio Bayona


Review:

There's something to be said for movies that play at TIFF after debuting at the Cannes Film Festival earlier in the year, but when they also play the New York Film Festival the following month, you know there's something special at hand. It doesn't hurt that Juan Antonio Bayona's debut "The Orphanage" (Picturehouse) has Guillermo del Toro's name on it as a producer, because his Spanish language ghost movie "The Devil's Backbone" is a fine precursor for this horror film with a heart.

It's a sad fact that it might be hard for Bayona to get out from behind the shadow of his far-too-famous producer, because del Toro's "The Devil's Backbone," a ghost film set during the Spanish Civil War, is beloved among both the horror and art film crowd. That be as it may, certain aspects of "The Orphanage" set it apart and give it an identity of its own, particularly its look at how a mother deals with the loss of a child set amidst familiar horror trappings.

It begins with a scene at an orphanage with a group of young kids playing a game similar to "Red Light, Green Light" before we see a young girl named Laura be picked up and taken away by her new adoptive parents. Decades later, Laura's husband has bought the orphanage with plans to turn it into a home for disabled children, and they've moved in with their 7-year-old son Simón. The boy immediately starts acting odd (or odder) talking about an imaginary friend named Tómas. At a party for the opening of the hospital, Simón mysteriously disappears, and Laura immediately suspects a strange old woman who has been lurking around the house. Months later and Laura is still convinced her boy is still alive or that his spirit is haunting the creepy old house. To say much more about the general plot might give far too much away, but there's a lot of depth at play here and many levels to the story and the characters, which slowly unfold as we learn more about what happened with the orphanage after Laura was taken away as a child.

For the first 20 minutes of the movie, you might feel as if you know exactly what's going on and what's going to happen, as it goes for the big scares and other cliches of ghost movies, particularly the creepy kid variety as epitomized by "The Sixth Sense" and "The Others" (the latter also directed by a Spanish filmmaker). At one point after Simón's disappearance, there's even an eerie seance scene that will immediately remind some of the Zelda Rubinstein moments in the original "Poltergeist."

That said, this is a incredibly creepy movie with lots of bonafide scares that might make you jump out of your seat if you've gotten bored or laissez faire about what might happen next, and once it starts, it never lets up as it keeps piling up the scares and surprises as it builds to a surprisingly poignant conclusion.

Belén Rueda gives a stunning performance as Laura, and she has to do a lot more than act scared and scream a lot, as might often be the case. This really is a performance on a par with that of Nicole Kidman in "The Others," although there's an added level from the grief over her missing boy and the fear that she'll never get him back.

Bayona's certainly a director to watch, as he clearly has a sharp eye for visuals and and for creating a mood, and it will be interesting to see if he decides to stay in the horror genre or try to explore other avenues for his next film, because one gets the impression from this movie that he's a director that can do anything.


Okay, now I'm really getting stoked about this. :woot:
 
Why did I think that this came out and I missed it already?

Okay, I see March it comes out. *whew*
 
http://www.shocktilyoudrop.com/news/topnews.php?id=3779

The New Trailer for The Orphanage
Source: Yahoo!
November 27, 2007


Yahoo! posted a new U.S. trailer for Picturehouse's upcoming spookshow The Orphanage. View the preview, along with two clips, via this link. This Guillermo del Toro-produced tale, directed by Juan Antonio Bayona, centers on a woman who moves into the orphanage she was raised in and encounters ghosts from her past. Picturehouse releases the film on December 28th in select cities.
 
This movie looks mortifying.

I can't wait.
 
I was going to go today.
Next week for sure.
 
Okay, I just couldn't wait I had to see it.
Very good, got a few jumps out of me. It dragged a little in some spots but worth the set up.
*sigh* I don't want to give away too much but the ending.....:csad: :heart:
 
It opens wide tomorrow, you sure it's not playing?
 
It opens wide tomorrow, you sure it's not playing?


I checked already. It's crap.

We JUST got Juno. I'll most likely just go see it when I'm in New Orleans like I always do.:down

Same reason, I haven't seen There Will Be Blood. No place around here has it.

:down:down
 

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