The Others (2001)

Rated: ![]()
Starring: Nicole Kidman, Christopher Eccleston.
Director: Alejandro Amenábar
Edition Details:
• Region 1 encoding (US and Canada only)
• Color, Closed-captioned
• Theatrical trailer(s)
• 2 disc set
• "A Look Inside The Others" - 30 minute documentary
• Visual effects featurette
• "Xeroderma Pigmentosum" The story of a family dealing with the
disease portrayed in the film
• An intimate look at director Alejandro Amenabar
• The Others photo album
• Widescreen anamorphic format
• Number of discs: 2
Editorial
Reviews
A welcome throwback to the
spooky traditions of Jack Clayton's The Innocents and Robert Wise's The
Haunting, Alejandro Amenábar's The Others favors atmosphere, sound,
and suggestion over flashy special effects. Set in 1945 on a fog-enshrouded
island off the British coast, the film begins with a scream as Grace (Nicole
Kidman) awakens from some unspoken horror, perhaps arising from her religiously
overprotective concern for her young children, Anne (Alakina Mann) and Nicholas
(James Bentley). The children are hypersensitive to light and have lived in a
musty manor with curtains and shutters perpetually drawn. With Grace's husband
presumably lost at war, this ominous setting perfectly accommodates a sense of
dreaded expectation, escalating when three strangers arrive in response to
Grace's yet-unposted request for domestic help. Led by housekeeper Mrs. Mills
(Fionnula Flanagan), this mysterious trio is as closely tied to the house's
history as Grace's family is--as are the past occupants seen posthumously posed
in a long-forgotten photo album.
With her justly acclaimed performance, Kidman maintains an emotional intensity that fuels the film's supernatural underpinnings. And while Amenábar's pacing is deliberately slow, it befits the tone of penetrating anxiety, leading to a twist that extends the story's reach from beyond the grave. Amenábar unveiled a similarly effective twist in his Spanish thriller Open Your Eyes (remade by Cameron Crowe as Vanilla Sky), but where that film drew debate, The Others is finely crafted to provoke well-earned goose bumps and chills down the spine. --Jeff Shannon --