Subscribe to our morning newsletter, Crash Course. "The Woman in the Yard" dissolves into a mess right after. Ramona is emotionally distant and prone to fearsome outbursts, notably berating Annie ...
Disclaimer: This article contains major spoilers from The Woman in the Yard. Reader's discretion is advised. A car accident kills David, depressing Ramona in The Woman in the Yard. As she grieves ...
When you buy through links on our articles, Future and its syndication partners may earn a commission. Credit: Universal Pictures I have no inherent issue with a movie that opts to be a slow burn.
The unsettling tone of the trailer suggests a blend of suspense-filled atmosphere, psychological finesse, and odd paranoia. The Woman in the Yard has been rated PG-13 by the MPAA for terror, some ...
“The Woman in the Yard” is effectively a cinematic garage sale peddling parts from better movies. There’s a body horror beat ripped straight from “Black Swan” and, of course, a stuffed ...
But “The Woman in the Yard” comes pretty close. It’s like a haunted-house movie with no tricks up its sleeve. It opens with the central character, Ramona (Danielle Deadwyler), laying in bed ...
At the beginning of The Woman in the Yard, Ramona (Danielle Deadwyler) is grieving. Dealing with the aftermath of an unspeakable tragedy, she’s frozen in bed, unwilling to get out from under the ...
The Woman in the Yard is a depressing follow-up to Carry-On for director Jaume Collet-Serra and star Danielle Deadwyler. Like a tangled weed that curls and twists about with no apparent rhyme or ...
Some genre movies grow and transform. Others, like Jaume Collet-Serra's The Woman in the Yard, metastasize. What begins as streamlined (if slightly unbalanced) modern folk horror soon bloats into ...
The latest from Jaume Collet-Serra revolves around a family who becomes rattled by a mysterious stranger who shows up at their isolated farmhouse. By Frank Scheck The metaphors weigh heavily in ...