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7/10
Absorbing but Ultimately Mediocre
syphongb29 May 2016
Great cast, great performances, great direction...but the script...it was as if the writers either got bored of the whole thing or hastily finished it on deadline day.

An absorbing, at times very tense buildup, hints at something possibly occult going on, but then a rushed ending that didn't need the buildup! It begins with a kind of Rosemary's Baby feel to it but the plot and tension builds to a certain level then remains there at that pace for the rest of the film.

Well worth watching, but just enjoy the actors and mood and don't expect to be blown away by any clever plot twists and turns.

It should have been shown as a Sunday evening BBC2 play or something.
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5/10
Great build up to a great disappointment...
mikalmoo1 June 2018
I'm a big fan of cult classics such as Rosemary's Baby so when I saw the trailer to this movie, I was intrigued.

The first third of the movie was quite well done; the mood was creepy and weird as intended, the actors were marvelous; the suspense really drew me in and I wanted to find out how this movie would pan out.

Then it got reeeeeally slow. It dragged on and the repetitiveness made it very hard to push through. Midway through, the mystery of the plot has already become quite obvious and predictable as it has been constantly spelled out to us over and over again. So by the end, the only way to save this movie is for an unexpected twist instead of the predictable ending. But no twist. Just a creepy, linear story with ok acting.
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5/10
Too unpleasant to be entertaining
MOscarbradley20 March 2017
"The Ones Below" is a decent enough little chamber piece on the perils of parenting, particularly if you suspect the neighbors downstairs covet your new-born baby. It marks the directorial debut of writer David Farr, (he wrote "The Night Manager" for television), and it's nicely done but in the end it's just too unpleasant to be entertaining. Basically a four-hander and well played by Clemence Poesy as the new mother convinced her neighbors are up to no good and by David Morrissey and Laura Birn as the neighbors, (personally I would have moved out five minutes after they moved in). It's let down only by Stephen Campbell Moore as Poesy's partner. Considering his outing in a similar role in the nasty little horror picture "The Children" some years back I would suggest Mr Campbell Moore get the snip sooner rather than later.
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A haunting story with an unfortunately flawed script
jtindahouse26 September 2016
Warning: Spoilers
I really enjoyed 'The Ones Below' and was almost willing to give it a '9' rating, when I suddenly realised there was a glaring and unforgivable plot hole ruining the premise of the movie, or more importantly its twist. Usually I'm very forgiving when it comes to plot holes, because I'm pretty good at finding a way to justify them in some context and not allow it to destroy the experience for me. On this occasion though I simply could not do that. (SPOILERS) When the twist at the end is revealed that it was never actually the baby being thrown into the river, it makes no sense that no one has actually gone in searching and worked out there is no baby and launched a massive search. It would take the police literally 5 minutes, by the look of that river, to go in there and find whatever bundle was actually thrown in (I suspect the cat). In fact I kept expecting the father to dive in right there on the spot. You'd have to wouldn't you?

It's a shame that a very poor and lazy piece of writing can take so much away from an otherwise great film. There was a lot of good elements here. There was the mystery side of things, where we were never entirely sure of character's motives and whether things were as they seemed or not. There was the dramatic side of things, with people genuinely dealing with loss and depression. And there was a lot of intensity in particular scenes, mostly created by some excellent acting by the main four actors in the cast. Putting aside the writing flaws in the ending, I did like it as a twist. It's not the most blindsiding of plot twists (because a part of you suspects this the entire film) but it still works. Definitely a film worth a look.
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7/10
Thrills You Gradually. ♦ Grade B-
nairtejas11 June 2016
I think David Farr gave more time to this thriller than to his much- anticipated and more popular le Carre adaptation, The Night Manager. For this one is a real winner between the two, despite of the variance in genre.

Kate (Poesy) and Justin (Moore) are a sweet preggers couple living in peace in the upper part of a duplex apartment. The newest renters of the lower part are another sweet but superstitious couple from Germany, Theresa (Birn) and Jon (Morrissey), also expecting a child. Soon after they move in. an emotionally devastating incident brings endless grief to the ones below and paranoia to their luckier neighbors above, especially to Kate. Because Kate thinks that Theresa and Jon might have some ulterior motive. And then the plot starts moving swiftly, exhibiting some great cinematography and writing as it moves.

Poesy is excellent in her enactment of an anxious mother of a newborn. Her petite appearance helps and so does the support from her spouse who is a rather normal husband torn between work and personal life. Theresa and Jon steal the limelight, and the writer aptly denotes and connects them with the color yellow that is effervescent of their apparent darker side.

The story involves human nature and the extent to which it can go when stricken with sorrow. Consequences and damages stop being concerns as the person quests to achieve what is not rationally right and what can only be achieved through crime. Farr has written the story well, and with the backing that he gets from the camera and score, he definitely places his attempt in the good baskets.

BOTTOM LINE: David Farr's The Ones Below is a finely made film with some good actors playing natural and slightly eccentric characters who are just trying to manage life... and death. A good afternoon watch at the cinema.

Can be watched with a typical Indian family? YES
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7/10
WARNING: This Movie will Make you Lose Trust in New People
elicopperman2 August 2018
In 2016, a British thriller entitled The Ones Below was released, though it originally first screened at the Toronto Film Festival the previous year. While it did sweep under the radar, there is a good chance that this film will go on to be a cult classic in the near future. As for what I think, while it did leave me horrified the first time watching it, I will admit that it isn't without its flaws. That being said, what does make the film intriguing to watch is how it tackles the frustrating anxieties of early motherhood, and subverts these themes with paranoia.

The film revolves around a married couple named Kate and Justin who have recently had a baby. However, when new neighbors named Theresa and Jon have moved into the flat beneath theirs, tensions begin to rise with their friendship regarding said newborn. Writer/director David Farr succeeds very well at showcasing the hormones and emotions of a mother during a time like this. Although if you may be ecstatic that you've made a human being of your own, it doesn't necessarily mean you automatically know what you're doing in a situation where your life could be at risk. In addition, given Kate and Theresa's friendship, Farr manages to make even the simplest conversations feel innocent albeit awkward and unsettling.

With two suspicious neighbors comes idiosyncratic character traits, and compared to the more seemingly light hearted Theresa, Jon is more abrupt, making Kate and Justin's interactions with them become all the more disturbing. In fact, after the baby Billy is born, odd occurrences and disturbing noises keep on arising, which nearly drive the couple nuts: from car honks, to muffled baby monitor sounds, to even a cat slinking underfoot. With tense moments like these, there are definite comparisons to be made with Rosemary's Baby, let alone by the subject matter and the lean and brisk tone. Not to mention, it's great to see a horror movie nowadays without a single jump scare, or even gore for that matter; nice change in age.

In terms of negatives, while the twist is very well structured and horrifying, the climax does drag on at points to get there, and after a while it does become a little too obvious what the outcome will be. Also, even during the film's second act, Theresa and Jon's intent becomes pretty obvious if not inevitable, and even with all the stakes that occur, the narrative really starts to reveal how straightforward it really is. Nonetheless, I still recommend The Ones Below for its unsettling atmosphere, subversive mix of parenthood and paranoia, and its traumatic twist that will give you trust issues for the rest of your life. The truth is that there are plenty of people out there who will end up causing you suffering for the sickest of reasons, and this film understands just how risky raising a child can really be.
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7/10
Wicked People, Do Wicked Things.
albereinstein30 May 2016
Warning: Spoilers
I'm not a film critic to say the least, but I do enjoy a good story and decent plot with hint of twist. For me this film had a little of all it. From the cast performances, to the plot and story, this one kept me interested from beginning to the end. Two couples expecting a child, living in a two family home. One couple lives upstairs and the other couple are The Ones Below, lose their expecting child, and from there, the story unfolds. Good afternoon, film especially when you have a day off, just to relax and kick your feet up on the couch. I will say that for me, I wished the characters had just a little more depth especially for the build up towards the end. I was disappointed in what happened to the mother who did give birth. Truly a diabolical look into how wicked people do wicked things. Overall good watch, and worth a buying a ticket if it was still in theaters. Recommended watch.
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6/10
Like a very good student film.
Sergeant_Tibbs17 October 2015
Partly funded by the BBC and premiering at the Toronto and London Film Festivals, The Ones Below is a demonstration of the lack of imagination in British cinematic language that's really disheartening. British cinema is often great from the eyes of an auteur with something to say, such as Mike Leigh, Terence Davies and Shane Meadows, but when it comes to something like this which is supposed to simply be a piece of thrilling entertainment, it's disappointingly one- dimensional. I yearn for more emerging voices to get this type of exposure instead. The Ones Below is like a very good and expensive student film. Had it been conceived from a recent graduate, it'd earn a bit more of a pass. Instead, it's overthought and underdeveloped, too often opting for cheaper tricks and easier melodrama.

Clémence Poésy, a familiar face from her role in Harry Potter, In Bruges and 127 Hours, plays mother-to-be Kate who just moved into the top half of a duplex with her husband Justin, played by Stephen Campbell Moore. Apprehensive about their downstairs neighbours, they avoid them until Kate discovers that Teresa, played by Laura Birn, is equally far along with her pregnancy. They swiftly become friends and she invites Teresa and her intimidating husband Jon, played by David Morrissey, upstairs for dinner. Though friction with conflicting personalities initially rustles tensions, it's an unbearable tragedy at the dinner's end that sparks the film's ultimate story of parental paranoia in the vein of Roman Polanski's memorable motifs on women in apartments.

To be fair, Poésy really commits to the film in the first performance I've seen from her which isn't somewhere between a bit part and a supporting character. She combats the melodrama with a rawness that really benefits the film. The problems come in the film's contrivances and staging where each actor's hesitations and reactions are over measured. Perhaps this is due to writer/director David Farr's previous theatre background, as it very clearly shows his lack of nuance when it comes to the bigger screen. Throughout the whole aforementioned dinner sequence, Morrisey's eyes are shrouded in shadows as if the idea of his menacing nature couldn't have been more subtly communicated. But admittedly, in its simplicity it is entertaining and engaging, but it's not satisfying to be so spoon-fed. The questions it asks are superficial albeit acceptable if this was designed for Britain's smaller screen.

There's not an inch of the frame wasted as they try desperately to make this two-story narrative cinematic. It works, and it's thoroughly attractive, but it's almost too full and vibrant, not reflecting the rough tone that the film should have. Spending money on lights and cranes which are just used for unmotivated movement remove the film of a human grounding that it's begging for. It does offer this reflection of how Kate feels later on as it grows more rugged and desperate, but it doesn't stitch together in a way that really puts you in her head, and by that point it's too late. The scenes feel more like examples of feelings rather than following a strong narrative thread, developing the characters beyond well worn archetypes. The language it uses is based in clichés rather than speaking a compelling voice of its own.

Otherwise it's trying too hard to cover all ground as it shoehorns in a subplot regarding Kate's relationship with her parents. We have a distant mother who's unfathomably selfish and then some kind of connection with her dead father as she for some reason must brave the weather to visit her grave and leave her child in the hands of someone she explicitly doesn't trust. The film often defies logic for the sake of an empty gravitas. It's piling lots of ideas about relationships in social classes and anxieties about motherhood but never really exploring a single theme to a particular result. In fact, its terrifying conclusion ends up being a relieving best case scenario. It'd be unfair to call it a complete mess and its effort isn't wasted. I just expect much better things from well-resourced British cinema that doesn't resort to appealing to the least perceptive people in the room.

6/10

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3/10
A gaping maw of a plot hole at the end ruins this film
jonchamps20 April 2018
Warning: Spoilers
The idea is a good one, and up until the last ten minutes it's actually very clever. However - spoiler alert - baby goes missing, no investigation, father never mentions why wife is so worried and no police? over a missing baby? Rudimentary investigation would have revealed who did it in ten minutes. Utterly relentlessly pointless ending that makes no sense! How was this ever released with such a painful plot hole!
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7/10
Below average thriller
justice_for_allro30 August 2016
It is a below average thriller if you consider the theme. I mean most of those TV movies of the 90's covered this topic, or at least a similar one.

A pretty modern take on a "classic" topic, with good acting, pretty good script and some nice camera-work and composition.

Not bad for a debut film, it keeps you guessing throughout, makes you think what twist will it be in the end.

As far as character development is concerned i think the director did a pretty good job in delivering close to 3 dimensional characters that you might care for.
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4/10
A big buildup...to cliches.
bs-334354 November 2018
Warning: Spoilers
I'm not sure when the last time was I saw a movie that did so well, 95% of the time...and then they mess it up at the end. I won't go into the major plot too much, but suffice it to say that this film does an excellent job building tension between the couples, a weird intimacy between the female leads, and a sense of "what are they capable of, exactly?" thoughts about the mysterious couple from below. Unfortunately, it builds to an incredibly predictable climax. Oh, the mysterious couple? Run-of-the-mill murderers / baby thieves. They do an excellent job hiding the crime (with one glaring exception), but otherwise it's just a dull, been-there-done-that "shocking" ending. The quotes are due to the fact that this movie contains a blankly starring, dead inside female lead, "the Governor", and lots of marital strife. And this movie is labeled as a thriller, so you know someone is dying. So, not shocking, because the ending is as you'd expect it for the genre. I could excuse most of the predictability due to strong acting performances, except a huge plot hole. We the audience, are to accept that Justin was lead to believe at the end his baby drowned, Okay fine. But the movie implies the killer dropped a bundled up cat in the baby basket in the river, a completely still river. There's no way divers wouldn't dredge the entire length of it looking for a baby or the body. The river was absolutely still and Justin arrives moments after the bundle is dumped. Divers would've found it. I think the investigation would quickly change to a murder investigation if they found a drowned cat in the bundle, or even just cat hairs and no human remains, don't you think? There's no way on Earth it's assumed the baby washed away, without looking, especially for a distraught (but it's implied intelligent) father. So, that major gap in logic created a convenient/predictable "bad" ending, ruining a otherwise excellent film.
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8/10
Really tried my patience; but once the story really gets going, it gets good.
Hellmant7 June 2016
'THE ONES BELOW': Four Stars (Out of Five)

A British thriller flick, written and directed by David Farr. It stars Clemence Poesy, Stephen Campbell Moore, David Morrissey and Laura Birn. The film is about a couple, that's expecting a child, that gets into severe conflict with another couple, expecting their own child, that lives beneath them. The movie got good reviews from critics, and I enjoyed it as well.

Kate (Poesy) and Justin (Moore) are expecting their first child. A new couple, named Teresa (Birn) and Jon (Morrissey), just moved into the apartment below them; and they're expecting their first baby as well. The two couples meet, and have dinner together. Something goes horribly wrong, and the couples find themselves at great odds with each other.

The film is very slow-building, at first, and that really tried my patience; but once the story really gets going, the movie becomes very interesting. The characters are all really well written, and acted. The film is also nicely stylized, with creepy, and sometimes very unsettling, atmosphere. The twist at the end is not that shocking though (not nearly as much as the filmmakers appear to think), and (again) the first half of the movie is very slow-paced.

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7/10
Unsettling film, yet could not stop watching...
jasmineporter1230 November 2016
I thoroughly enjoyed this movie. In the first 20 mins of the film, I was wondering what was up with the weirdness of it all. I just felt weird watching it, but it was a good kind of weird. The two female actors stole all of the scenes. They were fantastic. About halfway into the movie, I was wondering what was going to happen. I felt so inclined to skip to the end to see because sometimes I'd rather not wait. It was so intense, but I stuck it out and I was not disappointed. Great film. The movie overall was unsettling and dismal, but I liked the feel of it. Psychological dramas are my favorite. I would definitely watch The Ones Below again in the near future and it is definitely recommended.
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4/10
Indicative of the times we live in
rdeflorio-6589522 April 2018
Warning: Spoilers
I'm not naming actors by name. You have the couple expecting a child and the couple who lose one in the apartment below. Female below is dominated by an older man, who's full of himself to the point of nausea, who goes berserk after wife falls down steps after dinner "party". Said fall blamed on couple expecting's cat but truth is female below is freaking out due to dominants behavior, and try's to hurry out due to hiding wine consumption. Those below lose child. But the words yelled by dominating male WOULD INSURE NO FURTHER CONTACT WITH THOSE BELOW. But these are times when one must be positive regardless of behavior. Which leads to an unbelievable acquiescence by the couple expecting for these two dysfunctional and possible dangerous people below to be intertwined with them to the point of letting the woman below to "watch" baby of couple expecting, essentially a complete stranger, for hours on end. There's enough red flags yet father goes along with the ones below machinations even after mother gets wise....These are times when altruism is the norm. Where the phrase "don't be a hater" originated. The result is earned. Disturbing ending.
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Heartbreaking
ShunJackson1 November 2016
Warning: Spoilers
A part of me wonders if the evil couple faked their pregnancy and planned to do what they did all along or are they really that sadistic that they would go so far to kill someone else, destroy a family and then steal their baby. I was so super hoping for them to get caught...so I will admit, I was bothered by this as I went to sleep and then for the rest of the day after. What bothered me the most is how there seemed to be no real trust between the good couple. The husband seemed to immediately think in adverse to his wife and not believe her when she felt something was off about their neighbors. The wife, also should have headed her husband's intentions to ignore them and not involve them in their lives again, but she ignored his wishes as well. The acting was on-point and the directing was done very well. Kept me on the edge of my seat the entire time wondering what was going to come of this story.
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6/10
Familiar and the Telegraphed Ending Ruins the Whole Third Act
LeonLouisRicci21 October 2016
Well Acted and Suspenseful Psychological Thriller that is held Down by an Obvious Ending that is Telegraphed in the Second Act. There is No Twist to that and once the Twist is No Longer a Twist, everything is Less than it could be.

The Ending is also Drawn Out like it Thinks You didn't see it coming. Oh My! Didn't Everyone? So the Third Act is a Ho Hum, get it Over with affair. It isn't a Bad Movie just one that is Short on Surprises and in a Psycho-Thriller that's a Death Sentence.

The Cast tries hard and the Emotional Dial is set at 10 most of the Time and it makes for some Engagement and Intrigue, but it really has Nowhere to Go after the Middle. The Movie is Shot with some Style, but the Familiarity with the Story is its Premature Problem.

Overall, Worth a Watch but Ultimately a Let Down for those accustomed to this Type of Thing. A Good Effort Overall, but Average or just Slightly Above.
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6/10
Could you change the light bulb?
nogodnomasters3 December 2017
Warning: Spoilers
Contains a plot spoiler or two.

Justin (Stephen Campbell Moore) and Kate (Clémence Poésy) are expecting their first child after 10 years of marriage. Kate is distant from her mother (Deborah Findlay) and looks at a picture of her brother of which we know nothing about. Meanwhile, what appears to be the perfect couple moves in downstairs. Theresa (Laura Birn) is from Germany and her husband Jon (David Morrissey) is an international banker. He doesn't appear to be as nice. She is also expecting.

PLOT SPOILER PART: Circumstances cause Theresa to lose her child and a rift occurs between couples. However, they make nice, Theresa babysits and goes Rebecca De Mornay all over the film. Now at this point the film could turn out two or three ways and they chose the lazy ending.

The actors really put themselves into the script which failed to create the real thriller and suspense film this could have been.

Guide: F-word. Sex. Blurred preggo nudity. Close up breast feeding. Rebecca De Mornay was better.
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6/10
BOOOOOOOO!! Gave it a 6 only because of acting
rmsmith6884 September 2019
Warning: Spoilers
I was thoroughly enjoying the acting and the storyline, until that BS of an ending and open plot hole!! I don't believe the lady would have been that dumb as to drink that milk, I'm sorry, she's hella paranoid right now.. she wouldn't have even stayed at the house, she would have left to stay with her hatin mom, anywhere but that house, near those people, nah.. Then the crazy ones win!!?? What the what??!! Acting was good though!! And another thing, nobody drags the pond thing for a baby corpse, because if they had they would have found a dead cat in a blue blanket..
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7/10
Whatever Happened to Baby .... meets Neighbors from Hell
rbrb11 April 2017
Warning: Spoilers
A slow paced but intense thriller-drama. Couple in an apartment expecting their first child. Downstairs neighbors are also awaiting a new arrival. But something is definitely not right when a tragic accident means only one couple will be blessed with a child.... Despite some plot discrepancies there is plenty of good acting and engrossing tension to keep this movie interesting to the climax. 6 and a half rounded up: 7/10.
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1/10
Moronic
richkiel16 July 2021
There is a horror film cliche that is beyond moronic, yet survives decade after decade. In essence, it's about people finding out there is something threatening wherever they happen to be at the moment, yet doing nothing about it until it is too late. In this film, a couple finds out that they live upstairs from a couple of mentally ill people who happen to hold a terrible grudge against them, yet do nothing about it. This simply insults, annoys, and totally alienates the audience, because one starts to hate the protagonists and no longer cares about their plight. They sort of get what they deserve. And the film flops.
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6/10
A good Friday night flick for couples
RadialDaze22 July 2016
This film can swing either way under both gender viewing. Men might not be able to relate to the vibe this movie tries to put out. Women will more likely get the feeling the producer tried to create.

The acting isn't Jack Nicholson and Shelly Duval worthy but it holds your attention to transport you to the meatier substance: namely the engaging mystery of incredulous coincidences. Unfortunately these coincidences has little to do with the actual plot and or ending. There are also other non plot related elements thrown in for atmosphere.

Speaking of plot, there's a huge plot hole which comes at the end that the writers may have forgotten about. Let's just say it wouldn't cause Colombo a nights sleep figuring it out.

Overall this is a good mystery drama that both genders can enjoy together particularly at home curled up on the sofa.
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4/10
Modern-day psycho-thriller goes over old ground
Leofwine_draca17 November 2016
Warning: Spoilers
THE ONES BELOW is a modern addition to the wave of psycho-thriller films that were all the rage in Hollywood in the late 1980s and early 1990s. These films typically depicted suburban families at the menace of urban threats and THE ONES BELOW is no exception. This time around, dull couple Clemence Poesy and Stephen Campbell Moore are an expecting couple whose relationship with their new neighbours, played by David Morrissey and Laura Birn, quickly sours.

This thriller has an early plot twist which comes out of nowhere and is extremely shocking and powerful. Once I saw it, I was hooked. Sadly, the rest of the narrative can't match these early moments, and indeed this is a film that gets gradually more and more predictable as it goes on. As usual the main characters are ten steps behind the viewer and it gets more than a little familiar and more than a little tiresome very quickly.

Poesy makes for an unlikeable heroine although Moore is good, even though his character is typically dim and oblivious to what's going on around him (much like his role in THE CHILDREN). Birn and Morrisey are excellent in their subdued and creepy roles, no surprise given the latter actor's pedigree. This low budget story is well shot and realistic, but towards the end it gets very dramatically unsatisfying, which I put down to laziness on the writer's part. The extensive use of flashbacks is also poor. In the end, this is a seen-it-all-before type film that needs more oomph and more originality to make it work.
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8/10
Love thy neighbour....
FlashCallahan11 August 2016
Warning: Spoilers
Parents-to-be Kate and Justin bond with the expectant couple who live below them in a London apartment complex.

But when tragedy strikes, the relationship between the two pairs turns sinister, leaving Kate to fear for her sanity and the safety of her newborn......

It's refreshing that for once a film that would initially sounds like a paranormal type film, turns into something quite significantly sinister, a film that could actually happen to any couple.

The film has many red herrings from the upstart, shoes outside of the door could indicate that there could be some witchcraft/satanic rituals going on in the flat below, after all, the film has a very 'Rosemary's Baby' feel to it.

Everything appears to be fine, both couples are upper middle class and have their own opinions on subjects, but the titular couple are just a little too covert, her a secret drinker, and him not really conversing or making eye contact.

After the accident, things take a darker tone, the titular family leave, although their presence is still felt around the apartment, and once the baby is added to the family, things start going wrong for Kate.

The baby isn't sleeping, her relationship with Justin is breaking down, and then the couple return.

What makes the film work so well is that the writers keep their cards firmly covered right up until the final scene. Is Kate going bananas, or are the ones below purposely making their lives a living hell? When we see signs that foul play is afoot, Kate is on her own, and obviously when she confronts people, it's gone.

But if you've seen films like Pacific Heights, Unlawful Entry, Single White Female, or Consenting Adults, you know deep down that she isn't crazy.

The film isn't as extreme as the ones mentioned, in fact, it's not cinematic at all, it's the kind of thriller that would suit a two parter on the B.B.C. on a Sunday night, which isn't a criticism.

So all in all, it's a very interesting thriller, with some very tense, albeit rather familiar sequences, with a belter of a final act.
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7/10
An elegant and suspenseful thriller that never leaves its comfort zone.
tobiamazzonelli27 January 2022
The Ones Below is a 2015 thriller movie that follows the story of a couple that is waiting for a baby, moves to London and meets its new neighbors that are waiting for a baby too.

The two couples get to know each other and have dinner together; that evening, a tragic event will happen that will change their life forever.

The film takes an unexpected twist on the parenting drama-thriller sub- genre, adding some great psychological horror nuances at the beginning of the film, which is, for me, the best part of the whole movie .

It unfortunately loses attention half way through building to an ending, which sure is suspenseful, but not very surprising and unexpected as it might seem to be. (even a bit predictable)

What I appreciated most of this indie film was: the pretty cinematography that transmits tension and sadness through its colors and simple but effective visuals; the great performances of the cast, and the amazing build of tension.

Overall, The Ones Below is a nice thriller that is suspenseful enough, but doesn't take risks and is afraid to get weird. Which is a flaw for me that keeps it away from being as interesting as it could be.

Final score Worth watching without expecting too much. 7/10.
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4/10
Slow, sad and predictable
zinitime5 July 2021
I kept waiting for a twist, or SOMETHING to keep my interest, but it never came. "Gas Light" for a first time mom. The best thing about it was Gene Pitney singing "Take Me Tonight" at the end. Why this song? That was the only unpredictable thing in the entire movie. And the ending was crazy and totally illogical.
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