The Watchers 2024 -

Furthermore, the CGI creatures are a letdown. When they are hidden in shadow, glimpsed moving between tree trunks, they are terrifying. When the film finally shows them in full light (a cardinal sin in horror), they look like rejected designs from a 2005 video game. The practical effects in the bunker are wonderful; the digital monsters outside are not.

Rating: ⭐⭐½ (2.5/5)

Final Thought: A gorgeous, soggy, and frustrating misfire. The bunker is great. The forest is great. The script needed another draft. The Watchers 2024

The Watchers is a classic "first album" syndrome movie. It shows a director with immense taste in lighting, sound design, and atmosphere, but who has not yet learned to trust her audience. Ishana Night Shyamalan proves she can create dread. She just needs to learn how to resolve it.

Dakota Fanning delivers a reliably grounded performance. Mina is prickly and untrusting, suffering from a mother-related trauma that the script holds close to its chest. Fanning sells the paranoia of a woman who doesn’t trust the humans in the room any more than the monsters outside. Furthermore, the CGI creatures are a letdown

There is a specific, claustrophobic dread that comes from being lost in a forest that seems to breathe back at you. Ishana Night Shyamalan, daughter of M. Night, clearly understands this. Her debut feature, The Watchers , is dripping with atmospheric ambition and Celtic mythology, but it ultimately falls prey to the very thing it warns against: spending too much time in a confined space without a clear way out.

The film’s greatest asset is its texture. Shyamalan the younger has an eye for the liminal. The Irish forest is rendered as a cathedral of green darkness; the bunker feels cold, metallic, and suffocating. There is a tangible sense of wet —the constant drizzle, the rotting leaves, the fog that swallows sound. The practical effects in the bunker are wonderful;

Based on the novel by A.M. Shine, the film follows Mina (Dakota Fanning), a pet shop employee transporting a rare bird across the wilds of Ireland. After her car dies, she is forced into a strange, featureless concrete bunker deep in the woods. She is not alone. Three other strangers (played by Olwen Fouéré, Georgina Campbell, and Oliver Finnegan) inhabit the shelter. By night, unseen creatures—"The Watchers"—press their faces against the one-way glass wall of the bunker, observing the humans like specimens in a zoo.

If you go in expecting The Sixth Sense , you will be disappointed. If you go in expecting a rainy, Irish version of The Village meets 10 Cloverfield Lane , you will find enough here to justify a streaming night.

The middle third of the film works surprisingly well as a chamber thriller. The rules of "The Watchers" are fascinating: you must be inside the bunker before the last light fades; you cannot look at the creatures; you must entertain them by acting out human behavior. This setup creates a twisted reverse-zoo logic that is genuinely clever.

The exposition is relentless. Characters begin explaining the mythology in long, unmotivated monologues. The "big twist" is telegraphed so early that you’ll spend the final 20 minutes waiting for the characters to catch up to you. While the final reveal is faithful to the book, Ishana’s execution lacks the subtlety required to make it land. Instead of a gasp, you’ll likely sigh.