IMDb RATING
6.1/10
107K
YOUR RATING
An ex-cop and his family are the target of an evil force that is using mirrors as a gateway into their home.An ex-cop and his family are the target of an evil force that is using mirrors as a gateway into their home.An ex-cop and his family are the target of an evil force that is using mirrors as a gateway into their home.
IMDb RATING
6.1/10
107K
YOUR RATING
- Director
- Writers
- Alexandre Aja(screenplay)
- Grégory Levasseur(screenplay)
- Sung-ho Kim(Korean motion picture "Into the Mirror")
- Stars
Top credits
- Director
- Writers
- Alexandre Aja(screenplay)
- Grégory Levasseur(screenplay)
- Sung-ho Kim(Korean motion picture "Into the Mirror")
- Stars
- Awards
- 2 nominations
Videos4
Arika Gluck
- Daisy Carsonas Daisy Carson
- (as Erica Gluck)
Aida Doina
- Rosaas Rosa
- (as Doina Aida Stan)
- Director
- Writers
- Alexandre Aja(screenplay)
- Grégory Levasseur(screenplay)
- Sung-ho Kim(Korean motion picture "Into the Mirror")
- All cast & crew
- See more cast details at IMDbPro
Storyline
In New York, the former NYPD detective Ben Carson is hired to work as night watch of the remains of the Mayflower Department Store that was partially destroyed by fire many years ago. Ben became alcoholic and was retired from the police force after killing a man in a shooting. His marriage was also destroyed and now he is living in the apartment of his younger sister Angie. However he has not been drinking for three months and sees the employment as a chance to rebuild his life. When he goes to the rounds in his first night, he finds that the mirrors are impeccably clean and his colleague explains that the former night watch was obsessed with the mirrors. After a couple of nights, Ben sees weird images in the mirrors, but due to the lack of credibility of his past, his ex-wife Amy believes he has hallucinations as a side effect of his medication. When Angie is found brutally murdered in her bathtub, Ben discovers that there is an evil force in the mirror that is chasing him and jeopardizing his family. —Claudio Carvalho, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
- Taglines
- There Is Evil........On The Other Side
- Genres
- Motion Picture Rating (MPAA)
- Rated R for strong violence, disturbing images, language and brief nudity
- Parents guide
Did you know
- TriviaShot in Romania, most of it was filmed in Nicolae Ceausescu's unfinished Academy of Sciences building in Bucharest.
- Goofs(at around 40 mins) Gary Lewis' driver's license is a laminated card. New York driver's licenses are pre-printed plastic cards, not laminated.
- Quotes
[first lines]
Gary Lewis: [after opening window and seeing that it doesn't lead anywhere] Oh fuck!
- Crazy creditsAfter the end of the credits, the title appears, but backwards.
- Alternate versionsUK theatrical version was cut by distributor Fox to secure a more commercial '15' rating. The edits included the removal of a blood splash in the opening throat slashing, shots of a burned and partially naked woman screaming, shots of a woman's jaw being torn apart, and close-ups of a neck being cut with scissors. The DVD was upgraded to an '18' certificate and features the full uncut print.
- ConnectionsFeatured in WatchMojo: Another Top 10 Worst Horror Movie Remakes (2015)
- SoundtracksHappy Valentine's Day
Written by Michael Clark Gurley and Davis Le Duke
Performed by Billy Boy on Poison
Courtesy of Ironworks Music
Top review
Flat, uninspired horror film with intermittent unintentional laughs but with action that picks up in the last third
Ben Carson (Kiefer Sutherland) is an ex-police detective in New York whose alcoholism made him incompetent on the job and caused him to kill a man. Now he's trying to get his life in order. He's living with his kid sister to save money. He's taking medication to wean himself off the booze. Most important, he's trying to win back the trust of his estranged wife, a medical examiner, and maintain a loving relationship with his two young children. To make money while waiting for reinstatement, he takes a job as a night watchman at a department store gutted by fire. That was a mistake. He is soon tormented by the same supernatural mirrors that plagued his predecessor. The images in these mirrors do not reflect reality as we know it. The images will stare back at you, but remain in the mirror when you walk away. The images will even try to kill you. Soon, Ben Carson finds that the mirrors' demons follow him everywhere in every reflective surface. They're willing to harass him and his family until they get what they want. Ben's job is to find out exactly what that is.
This silly horror movie, based on a Korean film I haven't seen, shares several things about Asian-inspired supernatural tales that I dislike. The demons at first seem limited to a single space, but then later prove they can follow you wherever you go. They'll follow the protagonist, attack him, attack everyone he knows. They seem bound by certain limitations at first, but then it seems they can pretty much do anything they want - which makes all the running around, running away and desperate investigations into old records and dirty secrets seem pretty pointless. This one has lots of the usual gross-out effects (especially in the unrated version I saw), including a hideous and prolonged jaw-ripping scene.
The movie starts out flat and uninspired, and makes too little use of its main set piece - the burnt-out department store. Every line of dialogue is prosaic and sounds like something we've heard a hundred times before. The music is clichéd and slightly intrusive. There are intermittent unintentional laughs. The action picks up in the last third, which makes things less dull, but even stupider than before.
This silly horror movie, based on a Korean film I haven't seen, shares several things about Asian-inspired supernatural tales that I dislike. The demons at first seem limited to a single space, but then later prove they can follow you wherever you go. They'll follow the protagonist, attack him, attack everyone he knows. They seem bound by certain limitations at first, but then it seems they can pretty much do anything they want - which makes all the running around, running away and desperate investigations into old records and dirty secrets seem pretty pointless. This one has lots of the usual gross-out effects (especially in the unrated version I saw), including a hideous and prolonged jaw-ripping scene.
The movie starts out flat and uninspired, and makes too little use of its main set piece - the burnt-out department store. Every line of dialogue is prosaic and sounds like something we've heard a hundred times before. The music is clichéd and slightly intrusive. There are intermittent unintentional laughs. The action picks up in the last third, which makes things less dull, but even stupider than before.
helpful•1311
- J. Spurlin
- Oct 2, 2009
Details
- Release date
- Countries of origin
- Official site
- Language
- Also known as
- Into the Mirror
- Filming locations
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
- Budget
- $35,000,000 (estimated)
- Gross US & Canada
- $30,691,439
- Opening weekend US & Canada
- $11,161,074
- Aug 17, 2008
- Gross worldwide
- $78,094,714
- Runtime1 hour 50 minutes
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 2.35 : 1
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