Daniel and Sara have a 9-year-old son, Eric, and they've just moved to a new home not knowing the neighbours call it "the house of the voices". Eric is the first one to notice the odd noises... Read allDaniel and Sara have a 9-year-old son, Eric, and they've just moved to a new home not knowing the neighbours call it "the house of the voices". Eric is the first one to notice the odd noises behind each door.Daniel and Sara have a 9-year-old son, Eric, and they've just moved to a new home not knowing the neighbours call it "the house of the voices". Eric is the first one to notice the odd noises behind each door.
- Awards
- 2 wins & 2 nominations total
José Luis Lozano
- Guardia Civil 1
- (as José Luís Lozano)
Featured reviews
Pros:
The story and the screenplay was good, never let me skip any scene.
Jump scares are decent and were plotted where its needed.
Unpredictable climax and the twist.
Cast performances were good.
Sound and cinematography was good, enjoyable with home theatre.
Cons: Not much but I felt some slowness in-between the movie.
Cons: Not much but I felt some slowness in-between the movie.
Well... If your child is hearing voices there are three probable reasons for this:
1) He has a very strong imagination. 2) A traumatic life experience or mental health problems such as schizophrenia or bipolar disorder. 3) The house you are in is haunted.
As Don't Listen is a horror movie the third option is clearly the obvious one. This is a fine Spanish horror flick that is full of creepy moments - we get many of those wonderful shots of shadowy figures in the background - and the atmosphere of dread and horror as the malevolent spirit preys on the residents with a series of brutal mind games is great, that all said, it's unfortunate that the last act relied heavily on our cast of characters acting like complete idiots, which to be is fair standard horror stuff. This movie also answers the question, "What is worse than building your house on an ancient burial ground?"
Note: If flies are swarming around a crack in the wall it might be a good idea to find out what's inside that particular wall..
1) He has a very strong imagination. 2) A traumatic life experience or mental health problems such as schizophrenia or bipolar disorder. 3) The house you are in is haunted.
As Don't Listen is a horror movie the third option is clearly the obvious one. This is a fine Spanish horror flick that is full of creepy moments - we get many of those wonderful shots of shadowy figures in the background - and the atmosphere of dread and horror as the malevolent spirit preys on the residents with a series of brutal mind games is great, that all said, it's unfortunate that the last act relied heavily on our cast of characters acting like complete idiots, which to be is fair standard horror stuff. This movie also answers the question, "What is worse than building your house on an ancient burial ground?"
Note: If flies are swarming around a crack in the wall it might be a good idea to find out what's inside that particular wall..
Pretty basic loud horror but done right. No overly obnoxious jumpscare, some smart atmospheric spoopyness, and a decent interesting story.
The plot: after a family moves in to an old house, the parents become concerned that their son is hearing voices.
Haunted house movies tend to be pretty cliched. You have to really like the formula to sit through most of them. It helps if you shake things up by watching the occasional non-English film. But, even so, you frequently end up feeling like you've already seen that movie a few times already.
"Don't Listen" doesn't stray from the template used by so many other haunted house movies. There's the standard bit of exposition about why the family can't leave the house. And, of course, someone finds a book that explains the movie's plot in detail.
However, quite a few of the scenes were well-acted, and the characters were all pretty likable. Each of the characters got to have their own spooky moment, where they sloooowly reach toward something they probably shouldn't be reaching toward. Then there's a sudden, loud noise, and the character sloooowly backs up, not realizing that there's something spooky behind them. If you can handle such cliched scenes, it's actually done pretty well.
Near the end of the movie, everything is explicitly and tidily resolved. There is absolutely no metaphor here, and there is literally no chance that you walk away from this movie scratching your head. It left me wondering if maybe this was meant for a younger, less jaded demographic than me.
Haunted house movies tend to be pretty cliched. You have to really like the formula to sit through most of them. It helps if you shake things up by watching the occasional non-English film. But, even so, you frequently end up feeling like you've already seen that movie a few times already.
"Don't Listen" doesn't stray from the template used by so many other haunted house movies. There's the standard bit of exposition about why the family can't leave the house. And, of course, someone finds a book that explains the movie's plot in detail.
However, quite a few of the scenes were well-acted, and the characters were all pretty likable. Each of the characters got to have their own spooky moment, where they sloooowly reach toward something they probably shouldn't be reaching toward. Then there's a sudden, loud noise, and the character sloooowly backs up, not realizing that there's something spooky behind them. If you can handle such cliched scenes, it's actually done pretty well.
Near the end of the movie, everything is explicitly and tidily resolved. There is absolutely no metaphor here, and there is literally no chance that you walk away from this movie scratching your head. It left me wondering if maybe this was meant for a younger, less jaded demographic than me.
I watched it without expectations. And then it turned out to be really scary and good. I love when that happens. Loved the twist at the end, too. There's a post credit scene that hints at a sequel.
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaAt one point, the father introduces himself as Daniel Belasco. Daniel Balasco is also the name of the owner of the infamous Belasco house in the movie The Legend of Hell House (1973).
- GoofsAt 16.43 the mother tells the father that Eric has been expelled from school, after some explanations the father tells him to go and do some homework, he shouldn't have any if he's been expelled.
- Crazy creditsThere is a post credit scene showing German and Ruth looking at footage of an exorcism.
- ConnectionsFeatured in The Rite of Spring (2022)
- How long is Don't Listen?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Official site
- Language
- Also known as
- Voces
- Filming locations
- La Berzosa, Madrid, Spain(Finca LA NAVATA, La Berzosa, Madrid, Spain)
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
- Gross worldwide
- $443,458
- Runtime1 hour 37 minutes
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 2.35 : 1
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