What would you do if you placed a baby monitor in the little
one’s room and heard eerie voices emanating from the speakers in the night? Get
a video monitor to go with it of course. Then what if you see shadowy figures
sitting by the infant’s crib?
For Juan (Javier Guttiérez) and Sonia (Leonor Watling),
that is exactly what happened. Having bought an old fixer upper of a house,
they need to know if the sounds they are hearing in the baby’s room are real or
a figment of their overactive imaginations.
The Baby’s Room (La habitación
del niño) is a Spanish film that is
included in a set of six films entitled collectively: Films to Keep You Awake. It is the only one we watched, and it was
scary enough for one night’s viewing without adding any other stories to the
mix. There are English subtitles, easy enough to read as you watch.
Leonor Watling played the beautiful Alicia in Talk to Her (see my review) and in this
film has quite a lot more room for movement! The Baby’s Room was released in 2007 and came after her part as
Alicia. In a film of only one hour and 17 minutes, this is a much larger role
for her. It is Juan, however, that the story most focuses on. At risk of losing
his job as a sports reporter at a newspaper, he spirals downward into paranoia
and fear, making Sonia believe he is going crazy.
But what he sees in those baby monitors is truly scary. (It
is a real shock at the end when the story reaches its horror film conclusion.)
In an attempt to bring sanity back into his life, Juan
visits Domingo (Sancho Gracia), who has some knowledge of physics and
parapsychology. This serves to educate and intrigue the viewer, but doesn’t
seem to help Juan very much. He continues dabbling in the supernatural world his
fixer upper seems to encapsulate.
The other thing that is interesting is a consideration of
ghosts or specters. Where do they come from? Are they an entity that exists
alongside of us in this world, or do they inhabit a parallel universe that few
can see and even fewer travel to?
Do we have evil twins who lurk in the shadows beside us? The
consideration of an inter-dimensional world, kind of like the one that UFOs are
believed to come from, is something to think about as you watch this film. That
is, if you’re not spilling your popcorn and drink all over the sofa as you are
scared out of your wits at yet another shocking glimpse into the dark side.
I recommend The Baby’s
Room if you like the horror genre and a mystery both. Films to Keep You Awake is a 3-disc set, but we watched it on
Amazon. They’re all drama, horror, thriller, mysteries, and perhaps at some
time I’ll watch those also. In the meantime, this is a good one for Halloween.