The Others Movie Review
The Others Review

"The Others" Overview

Rating: PG-13
2001
Cast and Crew
Director : Alejandro AmenábarProducer : Fernando Bovaira,José Luis Cuerda,Park Sunmin
Screenwiter : Alejandro Amenábar
Starring : Nicole Kidman,Christopher Eccleston,Fionnula Flanagan,Elaine Cassidy,Eric Sykes,Alakina Mann,James Bentley
The Others has a great ending -- one that will be spoofed in Scary Movie 4 and
referred to in Entertainment Weekly for years to come. It’s the reason why
people will rush to the theater this summer, spurred on by the word of mouth
from friends and co-workers.
What people will forget to tell you is that there’s more than 90 minutes of an
OK horror movie to watch before a glorious 10 minutes. Take away the
ending--which ties the script’s agnostic themes together too perfectly--and you
get The Haunting, just with superior acting and production values.
The latest horrorfest brings us to the British Isles of 1945, where the
repressed, icy Grace, played by Nicole Kidman (Note: Tom Cruise served as an
executive producer on the film), cares for her kids Ann and Nicholas (Alakina
Mann and James Bentley) in a colossal house, where things are in turmoil.
Grace has been told that her husband (Christopher Eccleston), who’s fighting in
World War II, is missing and unlikely to return. The house’s staff has simply
vanished. And to top it all off, Ann repeatedly sees visions of another family
who she says used to live in the house.
Ann tries to explain what she sees to her dubious mother, who drums Christian
doctrine into her children’s heads and has an impatient streak. At first,
Grace doubts her daughter. But when doors fly open and unknown screams are
unleashed, Grace strives (unsuccessfully) to gain control of the situation.
Meanwhile, the new housekeeping staff led by the friendly Mrs. Mills (Fionnula
Flanagan), acts peculiar. Mrs. Mills tells Ann that she has seen the same
visions, and that their presence will lead to some changes in the house.
The movie is propelled by a few highlights, most notably its look. The house
is devoid of natural light (the kids are allergic to it), which gives the movie
a continually creepy feel. Fog swirls in and out, creating a dreamlike
environment. Throughout the movie, Kidman dresses in long, uncomfortable
dresses, which scream her repression and cool demeanor. The kids talk in
sing-songy English accents, giving the false impression that everything is fine.
The one nuisance is director/screenwriter/composer Alejandro Amenábar’s
pacing. Amenábar (directing his first English language feature) spends so much
time establishing mood and religious symbolism that the movie simmers, instead
of boils. There are very few chills until the finale. However, the ending
still falls a bit flat because it’s so much livelier than the material before
it.
Writing this review, I’m reminded of when I first saw The Blair Witch Project
two years ago. I loved the idea, but I left the theater feeling a little
disappointed. It just wasn’t scary enough. I feel the same way about The
Others. The film geek inside of me is satisfied, but the Scaredy Cat in me isn’
t.
The Others DVD is an impressive two-disc set that will make your surround sound
system worth the amount you invested in it. The film's sound design is of
course the star, with creaks and screams coming from every corner of your
living room. Disc two features a number of interesting extras, including a
documentary about the skin disease the kids suffer from in the film, a
production documentary, and more behind-the-scenes footage.
She sees dead people?
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Review by Pete Croatto
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