The reason Anne kept insisting that her mother had gone mad & done something horrible is because she was awake & aware when the mother kiIIed them. The kids were asleep in the same bed when the mother kiIIed Nicholas first. He didn’t wake up but Anne did so she knew what was happening. Unfortunately since she was a child she didn’t fully realize that the mother succeeded & they were dead.
@OGBReacts8 ай бұрын
Ahhh makes sense!
@jose95938 ай бұрын
And when Anne starts with that heavybreathing, she is trying to provoke her mother, because that was what happened when Grace was killing them with the pillow.
@jasonseipler26658 ай бұрын
@@jose9593Its just something kids do.
@astragalusson3 ай бұрын
@@jasonseipler2665 Yeah, but when Grace said "stop breathing like that" and after that "stop breathing" in that dinner scene, it foreshadows how she killed them. It can even be exactly why/how she smothered them. Anne might be doing the same breathing thing after a similar heated discussion with her mother, like you said as kids do. But that time, Grace was really really mad, lost total control and really smothered her children saying "stop breathing (like that)" trying to stop that behavior which clearly annoys her deeply. I'm not saying it definitely happened that way, but it's pretty plausible and it makes sense. It really fits the narrative.
@jhornacek7 ай бұрын
The first shot of Kidman is her in bed screaming. This is her moment as a ghost thinking that she has just killed her children, as she describes at the end of the film. When Kidman first thinks there are intruders in the house, she goes and gets the shotgun. When she first picks it up she stops for a moment. This is her remembering that she has used the shotgun before but can't remember it - when she used it on herself when she died. Such a great film to watch on a rewatch.
@sagemenn7 ай бұрын
an that's the cause of their migraines
@jhornacek7 ай бұрын
@@sagemenn Yeah, she's a ghost so why is she having migraines? It's her guilt over what she did to herself and her kids. Good catch.
@astragalusson3 ай бұрын
The scream at the beginning can't be the moment she realized she just killed her children, it's been a few days since the servants disappeared and she wrote a letter/job advert (or something) for the post-man to pick up and a few days passed. I believe it's a dream (or whatever the ghosts see when they're 'asleep') and she re-lived that moment in the dream. Plus in the story she said she was holding the pillows, then she shot herself and she heard the kids' laughter or something. In that scene the children were always asleep after the scream until she woke them up to introduce them to the new servants.
@jhornacek3 ай бұрын
@@astragalusson That scream at the moment is clearly meant to be the moment she first appeared as a ghost. She describes it at the end of the movie as waking up from a nightmare, thinking that she had killed her children, but then convincing herself it was all a dream. As far as "it's been a few days since ..." she killed her children and then herself, and then they all appeared as ghosts and thought they were all still alive. There never was a letter for more servants. Or if there was, it was written while she was still alive. And the new servants that show up are not responding to the letter. They're ghosts themselves, coming back to the house.
@jcs10258 ай бұрын
A ghost story from the ghost’s perspective. Brilliant movie.
@ellaphx8 ай бұрын
My understanding is that neither the mum nor kids knew they were dead, but the rest, including the dad, did. So the dad was horrified to come home and find his wife and kids in the same state he was in, and when Anne relayed the story of what she thought was a terrifying but non-fatal attack, he knew what had happened.
@erinhaury57738 ай бұрын
Also, in that moment when Mrs. Mills was introduced to Grace's husband, you could see her realize that it meant he was killed in the war and, for a moment, it shakes her.
@ellaphx8 ай бұрын
@@erinhaury5773 yes, love that moment!
@miramataija16288 ай бұрын
I have actually never liked the part with the dad. His acting is weird in the wrong way. I feel like he does not fit in. In the end when the moment comes when you realize everything else, you still find the part with the dad is unclear. Is he dead? Does he know it? And does he know that his family is dead? Mrs Mills comments on this. It ruins the aha moment by the end of the movie. I suppose the character is made vague to fit in the plot and for the audience to think he suffers from PTSD. He has to be that way to not ruin the twist. I think the relationship drama between him and Grace is supposed to make the audience sympathize more with her, but I find him to be an intruder in the world that by that time has been built. I think both the acting and how he is written does not have the same quality as the rest of the cast and film. It is like he is and intruder, not from another dimension, but from another film. A film that is more vague and has an open ending, which The Others does not have. I think the movie would have been better without him. I have not even thought about what this youtuber said about Grace killing her children without even knowing her husband was dead.
@vanyadolly7 ай бұрын
@@miramataija1628 I love that part. I don't think it's ambiguous either. He does realize he's dead, and that his family is as well, but he chooses to move on rather than stay bound there.
@chiasanzes97707 ай бұрын
@@miramataija1628 Of course dad knew. Have we watched the same movie? He asked his wife What happen That day??
@learobinson44508 ай бұрын
In the late 1800’s & early 1900’s photography was very expensive so most people simply couldn’t afford them. Taking photos of recently deceased loved ones was popular so the family members would have a remembrance. Often the deceased were posed & open eyes were painted on after the photo was developed to make the subject appear alive. Sometimes the entire family would gather around the deceased for a family portrait. Wooden frames & stands were used to prop the dead up in chairs or to make them stand up. Children were often posed with their toys to make it look like they fell asleep while playing. This pictures are called Memento Mori photos.
@cinemeleon28087 ай бұрын
Incredibly morbid, as we know it today. I get the times and mindsets were clearly different then. In the same way mobs could gather and watch someone being lynched or burned, barely 50 years ago. The dark extremities of the human experience frightens me.
@AnnekeOosterink7 ай бұрын
One correction, the bodies weren't usually posed to look alive with eyes painted etc. A body is very heavy and the common wooden stands were used in early photography to be small and thin and not as noticeable, for living people, to help keep the pose for a relatively long time. The time a normal photograph took was reduced very quickly though, so those stands disappeared as well. The memento mori pictures were most often just a body, clearly shown as a body, lying down or leaning in a chair.
@cathyvickers90637 ай бұрын
My theory about the dad is that he died desperately wanting to see his family again, so wished himself home. He expected to say goodbye to a living spouse & kids...but they're like him! Then Anne tells him what happened! The allergy to light is real. (But ghosts won't suffer, since their flesh is in the grave,)
@dlweiss8 ай бұрын
Interestingly, in two different scenes, each of the children is ordered to "STOP BREATHING." So many creepy little tidbits hinting at the final reveal. :)
@cityfolkferal7 ай бұрын
Along with this, Grace has migraines throughout the movie because she shot herself in the head.
@leandroferraz37767 ай бұрын
- Grace's scream right at the beginning is not an ordinary nightmare. It's the realisation of what she has done to her children and herself. - Nicole Kidman wanted to quit during rehearsals, as playing Grace gave her nightmares. "At one point I didn't want to make the film because I couldn't even go there emotionally." - When the wandering Charles arrives home escorted by Grace, he meets Mrs. Mills, later revealed to be another person among the dead. When he approaches Grace in the fog and as he enters the room to greet his children, Charles' footsteps produce a sound not unlike the clanking of chains - which Anne had previously mentioned is a tell-tale trait of ghosts. - In the scene where Grace is loading the shotgun for the first time, she can be seen pausing in a recollective moment after she slams the breach shut. This is most likely due to her faint realization of deja vu, most likely alluding to her suicide by using the same gun
@nergal96688 ай бұрын
Awkward Ashleigh “tell ‘em Beans sent ya” Burton approved? I love this movie
@shainewhite27818 ай бұрын
One of the most shocking twist endings in horror film history! I watched this on HBO a year after it was released in theaters and it made my jaw drop!
@thane98 ай бұрын
I love the Ashleigh/OGB connection. You two are both so awesome.
@HuntingViolets8 ай бұрын
That feeling when one reactor you watch knows another reactor you watch.
@schneeqqeule8 ай бұрын
I thought the same thing. "Ooooh! Cool, they know each other. I Love that for them! :) Great reactions from the both of them as usual. @@HuntingViolets
@dneill84938 ай бұрын
It's the Reactor's Shared Universe!
@scipioafricanus58716 ай бұрын
@@HuntingViolets The Extended Reactor Cinematic Universe.
@HuntingViolets6 ай бұрын
@@dneill8493 It's happening more and more too.
@zammmerjammer8 ай бұрын
The servants disappeared and THEN Grace lost it and smothered the children. Anne says they left "and then it happened." We can see that Grace is a bit... difficult... to deal with. She's a control freak, because she HAS to be to keep the children safe, but it's also a suffocating existence, and then without her husband, and once the servants abandoned her, she was totally isolated with no forseeable escape.
@BigGator58 ай бұрын
"Sometimes the world of the living gets mixed up with the world of the dead." Fun Fact: To get the kids worked up, director Alejandro Amenábar would play scary music when they weren't expecting it. Medical Fact: The disease the children have is an actual disease known as Xeroderma Pigmentosum, which is basically an extreme sensitivity to sunlight. It is very rare with roughly a thousand people in the world who have it. Global Collaboration Fact: The Others (2001) comes from a peculiar and unique cross-section of production cultures. It stars an Australian woman playing an Englishwoman. It was written and directed by a Spaniard, backed by Americans, set in Jersey but filmed in Spain. Historical Fact: In a pivotal scene, Grace (Nicole Kidman) finds a photograph album containing pictures of people she believed to be sleeping. Mrs. Mills (Fionnula Flanagan) informs her they're all deceased, and that people photographed the deceased in the previous (19th) century. In reality, people did photograph their deceased loved ones during the late 19th century. Most were photographed lying down, as if in a deep sleep; others would be propped up in chairs, posed with favorite objects such as children with favorite playthings; adults with books or newspapers. The reason many families did so was because that would be the only photograph they would have of the family member(s) if they didn't, as photography was a rarity in the 19th Century.
@hanonondricek4117 ай бұрын
And photographers didn't snap instant photos; it took a long time to set up on a tripod. The camera and subjects had to remain very still for a long time to get enough light through the shutter of early cameras to expose the film, so it often was only done on rare occasions...such as _death..._ 👻
@Andy-ju8bb8 ай бұрын
The twist is done so well and is believable in the film. The clues are there for us, but we only see them from the ghosts’ perspective.
@HuntingViolets8 ай бұрын
The ghosts are being haunted by the living and, unwittingly, haunting the living.
@Devonshirejackdaw3 ай бұрын
I love that the ghosts couldn't see the living until the actual seance is so cool. This film had me hooked ❤ its like the sixth sense when cole says "they only see what they want to see"
@Ella-mc7pf8 ай бұрын
I love that you and Ashleigh know each other. Can we hope to see a collab on the future?
@AChickandaDuck7 ай бұрын
Wow, you called it in the first minute! 😂 I saw this in the theater and couldn’t sleep that night! So well done and haunting.
@SCharlesDennicon6 ай бұрын
No Sixth Sense before this movie = best twist ever conceived in cinema history.
@NikkieTwix7 ай бұрын
This movie has scared me since I was a kid 🤣 even after knowing he twist it still freaks me out. A neat detail is that when Anne tells Victor to touch Nicholas’s cheek you can see the sleeve of the pyjamas is loose and Anne’s is tight so it wasn’t Anne who touched his cheek
@terryv20067 ай бұрын
I love it when the movie leaves holes to create questions in us. Then at the reveal every question is answered at once. It’s so satisfying.
@priscilabee5837 ай бұрын
I loved how the husband has no reflection in the mirror, people who spotted that guessed the twist!
@OGBReacts7 ай бұрын
AHHHH I must’ve missed that! I kept looking in the background for something 😩
@MsDesperado307 ай бұрын
He is in the reflection. But it's "blink and you'll miss it moment" The mirror shows Grace's side of the bed. But i don't blame you, because I have thought the same for years. It was done cleverly on purpose, so we could be missled.
@dannyjorde26777 ай бұрын
That's not true. He is reflected.
@vanyadolly7 ай бұрын
He's the same as Grace and the kids so it wouldn't make any sense for him not to have a reflection.
@gazoontight8 ай бұрын
In the scene with the photo album, Mrs. Mills says something to the effect of, extreme grief over the death of a loved one can make one do things. An allusion to what Grace did to her children.
@vanyadolly7 ай бұрын
I think she either found out or subconsciously felt that her husband had died and that's what pushed her over the edge. The timing of him showing up so soon after is so convenient.
@Tiisiphone8 ай бұрын
Yes, you said that the servants were ghosts at some point! I love this movie, it is so underrated. Amazing performance by Nicole Kidman and Fionnula Flanagan (Mrs. Mills). This story got me at the edge of my seat, and I never saw the plot twist coming!
@HuntingViolets8 ай бұрын
And said the children were ghosts before we meet them.
@PrayerfullyBlessedMama7 ай бұрын
I can’t do horror- but seriously loved this movie. So we’ll done it’s thrilling but not very horrific. Except the trauma of the discovery at the end.
@leandroferraz37767 ай бұрын
"She's [Lydia] older than she looks"
@rickardroach90758 ай бұрын
5:57 Beware the nanny who arrives unexpectedly: _The Omen_ (1976), _The Hand That Rocks the Cradle_ (1992), _The Sound of Music_ (1965), _Mrs. Doubtfire_ (1993), _Mary Poppins_ (1964)… 😱
@jengoodwyn27157 ай бұрын
Especially those last two!! 😅
@Pamtroy8 ай бұрын
No, I don't think the Victorians photographed the dead to keep their souls living. They did it because that would often be the only image they could preserve of a loved one.
@williamjamesayers77197 ай бұрын
You chose a very PHENOMENAL movie. the Others is priceless suspense/mystery and unforgettable writing, directing and acting ended off with superb cinematography.
@NikkieTwix7 ай бұрын
The atmosphere and sound design in this movie is incredible
@jamesharper39338 ай бұрын
A ghost story from the perspective of the ghosts. I love this film. I highly recommend The Changeling from 1980 with George C Scott. It's one of the best of it's genre. AND it's public domain so it's free on KZbin.😁😁😁 Thanks for a great reaction. Have a safe and wonderful weekend.
@lynnc52528 ай бұрын
This is my all time favorite movie ❤ So happy you enjoyed it!! You absolutely said something about the servants being dead AND you started to say the mother and children too. But you trailed off.
@miramataija16288 ай бұрын
Did the servants live in the house the whole time since they died, and Grace and the children started to see them when they themselves died?
@davidlionheart24388 ай бұрын
Alejandro Amenabar's "The Others" is a work of genius. Truly one of the most brilliant ghost stories ever filmed. Every aspect is virtually perfect. I have rarely seen a screenplay whose threads come together so seamlessly and with such incredible revelatory power. The performances are uniformly excellent, but both Nicole Kidman And Fionnula Flanagan are simply stunning. Two of the finest performances I've ever seen in any film.
@kellie-nd1yp8 ай бұрын
I love your reaction! You had the basic premise but the way it unfolds you’re never quite sure what is going on. But yes you did say the servant characters were probably dead . The daughter saying her mother is mad can be taken a few ways but yeah it’s literally the case . Grace is a cold one and no one does the ice queen quite like Kidman . So she could always seem mad to the children. The big twists you may not expect what Grace did and her fate along with the intruders is well done.
@JackieG7178 ай бұрын
34:24 the line delivery + building of the music makes this scene very powerful, almost makes one have an iota of sympathy for her
@WendyKay847 ай бұрын
Grace drops hints about what sent her mad all throughout. She feels her husband has abandoned her in a large, isolated house where she has to manage alone with two kids in perpetual darkness.
@is25607 ай бұрын
11:31 if you watch closely, it's not anne's sleeve. you can compare it with 11:38 it's a different pajamas. anne doesnt wear that
@laurenherda24158 ай бұрын
Love this movie, such a great twist ending, im so bad at guessing these types of plot twists, watching it the 2nd time makes it great too to see it from the ghosts point of view knowing the truth
@lesliedaubert14117 ай бұрын
You can see that it's Victor's pj shirt when he touches Nicholas in the bed , in the scene where Anne is closing the bedroom curtains and Victor is opening them.
@tommiller48958 ай бұрын
I love the surprise endings of this movie, The Sixth Sense and Witness for the Prosecution. Now you can watch Awkward (i would substitute Awesome) Ashleigh's reaction to this movie.
@OGBReacts8 ай бұрын
All three I've now reacted to! Truly great movies.
@WilAdams6 ай бұрын
This is a wonderful example of ORIGINAL thinking. The concept (when this came out) was fresh and fun. It is also all the proof you need to dispute Hollywood's claims that people don't want ORIGINAL properties, but the success and longevity of this film shows that Hollywood is lying.
@SevenEllen8 ай бұрын
YES!!! This is an Easter present to me, one of my favourite ghost stories ever - This and The Sixth Sense. So happy! ^_^
@rickardroach90758 ай бұрын
23:02 “Walking around like regular people. They don't see each other. They only see what they want to see. They don't know they're dead.” Fool me once, shame on you; fool me twice, shame on me. 🤦♂️
@RedK57 ай бұрын
I love that movie
@timriehl15008 ай бұрын
I knew you'd like this!!! Really want to see your reaction to Muriel's Wedding! For Pride Month, I think you'd really enjoy The Children's Hour and Hedwig and the Angry Inch.
@spangelicious8378 ай бұрын
We watched this on TV for the first time, and we had our grandma's dog living with us at the time. That poor dog ended up hiding behind the couch, shaking for most of the movie. We think she was scared of the music. 🙈
@HuntingViolets8 ай бұрын
I think mostly they took photographs of the dead because photography was expensive and they didn't have a photograph of their loved one. Once they were lost, they desperately put together the money to get one last photograph. Often, there would be stands involved and attempts to make the subject(s) appear still alive, but there are also photos like those in the movie, where the subjects are clearly dead.
@bellasaward83308 ай бұрын
Ooooh! This is good! You might like to do Hide and Seek with Robert De Niro and Dakota Fanning, Sammy. ❤️
@WillFlyTheLightingGuy8 ай бұрын
Everyone talks about what a great twist “The Sixth Sense” has (which I always thought was kind of clunky and forced), but I think this movie has the best twist ending of any movie I’ve ever seen…and somehow it unfortunately flew under the radar.
@dannyjorde26778 ай бұрын
It only flew under the radar in the US. It was a huge success in Europe.
@sauldelvalle42886 ай бұрын
This is definitely one of my all time favorite films. It is done incredibly well and I've watched it at least 50 times. I am definitely enjoying reading all these tid bits from other viewers about clues that I missed while watching the movie. One of the things that always made me feel uneasy was when Grace and her husband are in their bedroom and she opens a closet door that has a mirror on it. When she opens the door, the mirror points at the bed and we see no reflection from Charles. I always wondered if this was done intentionally or if it was just a coincidence 🤔
@wayasaunooke34248 ай бұрын
Ok, had to comment again now I watched it... haha isn't it incredible! Your confused face throughout was the exact same one I had the first time I watched it too 🤣 Such a phenomenal film, seeing the ghosts from the other side of the veil "haunted" by the living and afraid, not of the dark, but of the light ✨️🕯
@BonniBarlow-fn6oj7 ай бұрын
You did say at the beginning that you thought the servants were dead or the children were dead. But not the family. Then you got distracted like we all did. The servants that showed up weren't the ones who left recently -- I think recent servants would have left after the mother killed herself and the kids, and the dad wasn't there, so the house got closed up until some people bought it and this scenario played out in much the same way. The servants wanted to help her accept that she was dead and killed the kids, but if they just said it, she wouldn't have believed it.
@simplyjuannie51288 ай бұрын
Hi. If you liked this, you might also like The Village.
@EVERYDAYGames008 ай бұрын
Watch population 436
@VelkanAngels8 ай бұрын
The Village was hardly a shocking twist. I can't explain why it was blatantly obvious (to me, anyway) without spoiling it for others but let's just say... None of it came across, looked or sounded even remotely honest or real (again, to me).
@RedK57 ай бұрын
@@VelkanAngelsI never seen it but I heard what the plot twist was
@thunderstruck54848 ай бұрын
Great movie, great acting, those kid’s acting was fabulous , thanks
@ElisaH_DarklyiShine8 ай бұрын
A haunted house story told from the perspective of the ghosts. Just marvelous
@KayQue-s3r8 ай бұрын
One of the best ghost stories of all time! I love this movie. Well done!
@allisongrinnell51078 ай бұрын
The servants couldn’t hear the piano because she made them sleep in the attic/shed even though she has enough spare rooms for a “junk room”
@OGBReacts8 ай бұрын
Fair! But I figured they may still hear it since it's an instrument that's echoing, that's all 😄
@zammmerjammer8 ай бұрын
Servants don't stay in the spare room, my guy. Spare room is for company.
@dannyjorde26778 ай бұрын
The real question is: Why was the father playing the piano in the middle of the night?
@RedK57 ай бұрын
@@zammmerjammerI forget sometimes that this was set in the past.
@55tranquility7 ай бұрын
Charles, Graces husband was killed in the war - he did not return home after armistice was signed in September 1945. Grace was grief stricken alone living in the gloomy house. All her family had left before the Germans arrived , she mentions this herself - some islanders did leave the island. Britain decided not to defend Jersey as it was of no strategic value, opting for a haphazard evacuation. Hence the majority stayed living under German occupation, Grace also stayed due to the difficulty of moving the children due to their condition. Charles saw this as surrender, so opted to join the army and go and fight - Grace was upset as it was his choice to do so and many other men stayed. Grace knew Charles had been killed and this is what sent her over the edge, when she was dead and a ghost she went into denial about this. Charles had a good idea he was dead, but wanted to see his family one last time before moving on - he had been trying to get home since he was killed. He obviously had noticed he couldn't see many people after he was hit by whatever killed him and probably realised he was seeing soldiers he knew to be dead. He also would have noticed everyone who is still alive can't see him. On finding his way home he is immediately shocked that his wife and children and the servants could see and talk to him, realising they were all dead he was shocked or 'ghost shocked' , his hope was to have one last glimpse of them alive and happy. Not only does he find them all dead and now ghosts, he finds out how they were killed and was even more shocked and saddened. But he also knew it was partly Graces grief over his death, and he felt guilty for going to war, he moves on leaving Grace still not knowing she is dead. When Grace shot herself, they moved into the world of the dead and became ghosts, the two worlds are separate but as we see can sometimes get mixed up but its only glimpses and not everyone is able to see the living and vice versa - it seems children can do so more than adults. So her actual servants didn't leave suddenly, Grace could no longer see them - they woke up to find all three dead, and obviously left due to this and also the need to find new work. So the ghosty servants have been there in the house the whole time, Bertha, Lydia and Mr Tuckle since they died in 1891 from TB. Suddenly Grace and the two children appear in the Ghost World of the house - but don't know they are dead. Bertha, Lydia and Mr Tuckle know this though and because the shock of realising you are dead and a ghost can bee too much, ie Lydia who hasn't spoken since she realised. So they they pretend to come looking for work to let Grace know slowly she is a ghost rather than just do a 'yeah you killed your kids and then yourself, your dead, so are we - welcome to ghost life' The ghost servants were like, right she doesn't know she's dead - we'd better let her know as she is freaking out about the new family that have moved in and her kids can see them. They are nice ghosts acting in Graces best interests, just didn't want to just come out and say 'look love you're dead like us, you killed yourself' as what had happened to Lydia - stopped speaking, they were trying to do it gradually.
@dannyjorde26778 ай бұрын
The servants left the house in the middle of the night when the family was still alive. And they knew that Grace and the children couldn't leave the house. She also thought (and she was right) that her husband died in the war, so all of that made her snap.
@rickardroach90758 ай бұрын
22:47 “Do I have to get the pillow again?”
@AuroraMeansDawn278 ай бұрын
The twist was UNREAL.
@myfriendisaac8 ай бұрын
35:51 We LOVE a good twist 👏🏾🍿🎬
@Lynn7015hb8 ай бұрын
I don't like horror movies either but this was one of those w/ a good story, good acting. I was suspicious about the housekeepers when I first saw it but the rest of it completely surprised me. Love Nicole Kidman. Enjoyed your reaction.
@MadcapMatt8 ай бұрын
There's a newly released Criterion collection of this movie. There's a 4k version that also comes with a Blu-ray with a bunch of new bonus features. There's also a standalone Blu-ray version.
@wayasaunooke34248 ай бұрын
Yay, I'm so glad you're watching this! I love the others! And nobody ever reacts to it 😩😂 Can't wait to watch ❤
@lynnc52528 ай бұрын
Kathateshorror just reacted yesterday 👍
@HuntingViolets8 ай бұрын
@@lynnc5252 That was a good reaction too.
@mettehansen97547 ай бұрын
This one of the most brilliant movies ever made😊
@brendanfoehr50868 ай бұрын
Stunning performances from Nicole Kidman and Fionnula Flanagan in this one. If anyone is interested, The Legend of Lizzie Borden (1975) is free on YT and Flanagan plays the Bordens' maid, Bridget Sullivan! Worth checking out, I adore Fionnula Flanagan. Also, tbh, I think Kidman deserved the Oscar for this (or for playing Suzanne in To Die For) more than she did for playing Virginia Woolf in The Hours; to me at least, this is another example of horror not being recognized, but I guess just add it to the pile with Toni Collette in Hereditary and Florence Pugh in Midsommar and Essie Davis in The Babadook, etc. etc. ad infinitum lol
@midianmtd8 ай бұрын
Sam your reaction to THE TWIST was awesome. I almost shot cherry Coke out my nose. LOL. A great supernatural thriller in the vein of Hitchcock. Saw it when it came out it and I remember how everyone had the same reaction you did. Thanks again for all your hard work.
@brendanfoehr50868 ай бұрын
It's horrifying what Grace has done, obviously, but she says the servants leaving and stealing things was what finally caused her to snap- her husband had not returned despite the war being over for months, her servants robbed them and left, and Grace was left to care for two photosensitive children alone. Her actions are obviously *unforgivable even in the eyes of God*, buuuuut I can at least understand and sympathize with why she might have lost her shit and snapped at that point.
@riel45538 ай бұрын
I got the impression that the servants "vanished" when she died, and the stolen stuff might have been the living putting stuff in storage. Certainly someone was left in the house to find their bodies, they don't have neighbours.
@brendanfoehr50868 ай бұрын
@@riel4553 Someone would’ve noticed eventually, I’m just saying, she literally says in the film the servants left first and she went mad
@vanyadolly7 ай бұрын
I don't think the servants necessarily stole things, but it's very understandable that she snapped.
@brendanfoehr50867 ай бұрын
@@vanyadolly maybe I’m misremembering but I thought she said something like “the servants left in the night with cutlery and silverware, they knew I couldn’t handle this alone” or something like that
@vanyadolly7 ай бұрын
@@brendanfoehr5086Yeah, she definitively says the servants took off suddenly and stole, but it feels like there's more there that isn't outright explained in the movie.
@juliajames1008 ай бұрын
I’m SO happy you saw this one! Have you ever watched Primal Fear? You’d love it, it’s not a horror movie 🙌🏻😅
@jesusfernandezgarcia94498 ай бұрын
Whenever I watch these movies, I'm glad I live in a small apartment and not in a big mansion.
@jh519138 ай бұрын
I’ve watched it in 2001. It still is my favorite movie.
@michellesmith45708 ай бұрын
Fantastic movie and reaction!! Another amazing, psychological thriller is Stir of Echoes with Kevin Bacon!! Movie is a phenomenal trip!💜
@samhasanain48418 ай бұрын
If you like unique mysteries with quite a twist, I highly recommend Oldboy (2003), the original in Korean, NOT the Spike Lee version. I guarantee you won't be disappointed and it will make for a great reaction...just checkout the thumbnails of others who have reacted to it...says it all.
@OGBReacts8 ай бұрын
Ooo yes I've heard good things about that film!
@tacticalgrace64568 ай бұрын
I like the idea that the movie/tv reactor community are mates or at least some of them are and turn up at the end of year reactor party.
@coreyhendricks94908 ай бұрын
This movie ranked at #83 in the 100 scariest movie moments on Bravo cool reaction as always Sam, you & Ashleigh should do an collab down the road, you take care and have a nice day sweetie 🥰❤️
@firegod0018 ай бұрын
Great job! I loved the performances in this movie. The kids were so impressive. Everyone was.
@austinj38817 ай бұрын
My first time I watched this, I thought the servants were alive until they showed the photo. I knew the family was dead when the husband showed up in the fog. I thought the gravestones were of the family. There is a line early in the movie that if you take it at face value, then you know everyone you are seeing is dead and the ones you don’t see are alive and that is the reference to showing the house. I had an expectation bias when they said this line and just thought it was poor writing and in a way it was because it literally gives away the twist really early. The two lines I would delete from this movie if I made it would be about the showing of the house and the sometimes I bleed. I think they give away to much information and leaving those two lines out changes nothing.
@kcirtapelyk60608 ай бұрын
I love a good twist and this movie has one of the best twist ending. Another great twist ending you should check out is Frailty.
@paull40488 ай бұрын
One of my all-time favorites; perfect in every way! I always enjoy watching reactions to this one.
@djr68768 ай бұрын
This is one of the few post millennial “ghost” movies Ive actually liked, I just don’t seem to care for the rest. The REAL oldies are the goodies for me.
@DanielGarrett01238 ай бұрын
4:13 - OMG! Okay Sam, you can just turn it off now. 🤣
@KrystalAnn06887 ай бұрын
I love when worlds collide, & I love that you love Ashleigh ❤ great reaction!
@Marjolein262648 ай бұрын
So fun when the twist gets revealed! Love how this movie tells the story from the point of view of the ghosts ❤ Another great reaction!
@Alicia_19707 ай бұрын
Loved your reaction. I love this movie and can't believe it came out 23 years ago 😮
@VeryCherryCherry8 ай бұрын
I just recently found both you and Ashleigh! You guys are both really fun. 😊❤
@OGBReacts8 ай бұрын
Thanks so much! She's a good egg
@olaspaz30798 ай бұрын
I often have dreams where dead people are alive and I'm none the wiser. I'd imagine being a ghost is even more "foggy". ❤️
@ktotheramer8 ай бұрын
OGB! Saw the thumbnail for this video and couldn’t wait to get to the reveal!
@metmanjeff8 ай бұрын
I think you accidentally called it right at the beginning! Great reaction (just watched Ashleigh before you). Even better t-shirt :)
@johnwjr77 ай бұрын
You kept saying that this could turn so many ways. I'm betting that was one turn you were not expecting.
@tomyoung90498 ай бұрын
A great movie, keeps you on edge all the way thru. And such an awesome twist with the final reveal. Also fun to hear that you are friends with Awkward Ashley, I watch her reactions as well.
@pricemoore20228 ай бұрын
Awesome reaction of my favorite movie!!!!!!😊😊😊😊😊😊
@RedK57 ай бұрын
I don’t really remember this movie and I just found you but I’m wondering if you ever saw the Sixth Sense? Great reaction btw Edit: I found the Sixth Sense reaction video. I’m going to watch it now
@diandriasmith8898 ай бұрын
Wasn't this one of the first "they were dead the whole time" movies?
@joegarcia32148 ай бұрын
What a twist!! Another great reaction. Also luv the shirt
@chrisrandall27108 ай бұрын
Glad you liked this one! Happy Easter from Ottawa ❤🇨🇦🤓 Now Top Secret from 1984 please xo
@House0fHoot7 ай бұрын
Poor Victor had a terrible time! And you saw 7 ghosts 👻
@BruceLee-t9n8 ай бұрын
You should watch or react to the descent after this. That's a terrific Australian made cave horror from 2005. To me it's as spooky 😂