The Orphanage (El Orfanato)

Spain's Official Submission to the Best Foreign Language Film Category of the 2008 Annual Academy Awards, is this chilling ghost story produced by Guillermo Del Toro (Pan’s Labyrinth).

A woman brings her family back to her childhood home, where she opens an orphanage for handicapped children. Before long, her son starts to communicate with an invisible new friend.

Variety magazine calls it “A fastidiously grim ghost story that rattles the bones of the haunted-house genre and finds plenty of fresh meat. An unsettling Spanish synthesis of The Innocents, The Others and every other cinematic chiller about a woman's psychic fixation with some not-so-innocent children.
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I apologise, we feel bad, but there's no trailer available. ~Ed.

Rating: 4 Flicks Review:

Guillermo Del Toro may only be listed as producer for this award-winning Spanish chiller (directed by newcomer Juan Antonio Bayona), but the crisp, elegant visuals and poignant supernatural themes have his magical fingerprints all over. This would be a worthy addition to his own canon, had he been at the helm, and that's high praise.

The set-up may sound familiar - spooky old house with sinister past, kids seeing dead people, freaky sack masks and so on. But far from a workaday 'things that go bump' exercise, this is horror with heart. Like Nic Roeg's grief-stricken '70s creep-out Don't Look Now or indeed Cronos - Del Toro's 1993 tale of love, faith and blood-sucking - The Orphanage is as sadly moving as it is frightening, and builds to a heart-rending emotional climax.

That said, when things do get jumpy, make sure you've got a spare pair of underpants handy - it's skidmarks central. Through masterful timing and superb sound design (silence is so much scarier than noise), Bayona has wrung the maximum level of tension out of some time-honoured techniques. And by keeping the amount of distracting CGI under careful control, everything feels so much more tangible and terrifying.

Oddly, it's been reported in some places that Del Toro will produce an English language remake of this too - but that would be a pointless endeavour. The Orphanage is gracefully shot, perfectly paced, wonderfully acted and scary as hell - a magnificent directorial debut. Can't they just leave it be?

By Ashley Bird, Flicks.co.nz

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Release date: September 25th 2008.

We haven't received times for this movie in this location yet. However these are updated as cinemas announce them, so check back soon. Hopefully the lovely cinemas in your location will choose to play it shortly. ~Ed.