
The main difference is that the protagonist in this story is an adult instead of a child. Belen Reuda gives a nuanced performance as a former orphan who, as an adult, buys the home she grew up in to care for special needs children. But when her adopted son Simon goes missing, she fears that his invisible "friends" might be more than a figment of his imagination. Part Pan's Labyrinth, part The Others and a dash of Poltergeist, this movie made the audience I viewed it with jump and gasp on a number of occasions. It scared me, too.
Like Pan's Labyrinth, The Orphanage weaves a fascinating tale with gorgeous cinematography and production design. You completely lose yourself and forget that you're reading subtitles. And, like del Toro's other films, it also has an ambiguously bittersweet ending. I wouldn't go so far as to put this one down as number ten on my list of my favorite 2007 movies, but it does not disappoint.
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