The Other Side of the Door: EW review

You can see the film-makers' intentions in this India-set supernatural horror film. They are trying to tap some of the same sense of extreme dread and yearning found in Nic Roeg's Don't Look Now. This, too, is a film about bereaved young parents.

You can see the film-makers' intentions in this India-set supernatural horror film. They are trying to tap some of the same sense of extreme dread and yearning found in Nic Roeg's Don't Look Now. This, too, is a film about bereaved young parents.

The new horror movie The Other Side of the Door looks, well, horrifying. The film is about a mother named Maria whose young son dies in a car accident, and when she can't get over his death, she seeks supernatural means to get some closure. The movie

What do an unproduced Darren Aronofsky film, a real-life cannibal sect and a badly injured creature performer have in common? They were all part of the creation of the new chiller THE OTHER SIDE OF THE DOOR, as director Johannes Roberts explains in 

Who doesn't love a story that deals with the forbidden? Don't look in the basement! Don't read from that ancient book of spells! Don't open that door! That's the whole hook behind The Other Side of the Door. In this Alexandre Aja-produced supernatural