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    Home»Entertainment»‘Bring Her Back’ Haunts the Screen — A Haunting Horror That Dares You to Feel
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    ‘Bring Her Back’ Haunts the Screen — A Haunting Horror That Dares You to Feel

    Mohit ReddyBy Mohit ReddyOctober 4, 2025No Comments5 Mins Read
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    Mumbai (Maharashtra) [India], October 4: Some movies scare your eyes. Others terrify your soul. Bring Her Back, from the horror-savvy Philippou brothers, lands somewhere between the two. It doesn’t merely want to frighten you — it wants to unsettle you long after the lights come up.

    In this review, we’ll walk you through its strengths, its scars, and whether this gothic, grief-infused thriller deserves a place in your watchlist this spooky season.

    The film opens on a deceptively quiet note: two orphaned step-siblings, Andy (Billy Barratt) and Piper (Sora Wong), are placed under the care of a foster mother named Laura (Sally Hawkins). Their father has died. Their new home is remote, dim, and strange. Laura seems warm, but grief seems to linger in every room she touches. And soon, as whispers grow, the siblings realise there’s something deeply sinister underpinning her “kindness.”

    Bring

    What begins as psychological unease gradually melts into outright ritual horror. Laura is haunted by her own loss: the drowning of her daughter. As her obsession with “bringing her back” deepens, she turns her household into an occult stage. The siblings, especially disabled or visually impaired Piper, become instruments in her tormented plan.

    From the technical side, Bring Her Back is strong. Its cinematography leans into shadows, rain, and glass — each frame feels claustrophobic, each long take laden with portent. The editing is deliberate, not rushed, allowing dread to simmer. Its sound design is clever — silence is as venomous as a scream here. And Sally Hawkins, as Laura, gives a performance that simmers with maternal grief, guilt, and cruelty. Critics note her role as “unsettling,” capable of kindness that feels like a prelude to betrayal.

    Rotten Tomatoes currently rates it as “Fresh,” with many critics pointing to Hawkins’ central turn as the film’s anchor. The film has grossed $39.1 million worldwide on a budget of roughly $15 million — a strong showing for a horror film that asks so much from its viewers.

    Bring

    What Works (Often Terrifyingly Well)

    • Emotional Depth Over Cheap Shock
      Unlike many horror films that lean heavily on jump scares, Bring Her Back invests in grief. Loss is at the story’s core, and successful horror here is psychological: watching caregivers unravel, mental lines blur, and personal trauma weaponized. Reviewers praise how the film doesn’t just show horror — it feels it.

    • Tension That Builds, Doesn’t Explode Immediately
      The slow-burning structure is rewarded. The first act is patient, giving time for atmosphere and unease, and this pays off in later set pieces.

    • Performances Unafraid and Uncomfortable
      Hawkins walks the line between grieving mother and monster. Billy Barratt and Sora Wong ground their roles, especially Wong’s portrayal of a blind child caught in someone’s madness.

    • Visual / Symbolic Horror
      The film uses mirrors, water, lighting, and fractured images to hint at hidden truths. The supernatural rituals aren’t flashy but are suffused with menace.

    • A Horror That Haunts Quietly
      Post-credit, the dread doesn’t fade. Many audience voices say they slept poorly after. One Reddit user remarked: “…it layers up twists that don’t always land, but the final act stays with you.”

    Bring

    Where It Wobbles (and Sometimes Stumbles)

    • Pacing Gaps in the First Act
      Some critics call the early portions slow. The film takes time to build, which some horror fans might see as stalling.

    • Ambiguities That Frustrate
      As mysteries unravel, a few narrative strands feel under-explained or left dangling. Critics point out that not every twist earns payoff.

    • Intensity That Can Be Overwhelming
      The film does not shy away from gore or discomfort. It may challenge viewers who prefer sustenance over shock; some sequences border on exhausting.

    • Derivative Echoes in Grief Horror
      A few reviewers fault it for leaning too close to an “A24 grief horror” formula. While the execution is strong, originality occasionally slips.

    Bring

    Streaming & Release Details

    • Bring Her Back premiered theatrically: Australia on 29 May 2025, US on 30 May, UK on 1 August.

    • As of October 3, 2025, the film becomes available on HBO Max (Max).

    • Earlier rumors suggested a digital release (premium video on demand) date of 1 July 2025.

    • In Canada, it’s streaming on Amazon Prime Video and available for rent/purchase on Apple TV / Amazon Video / Fandango, etc.

    So yes — you can stream it now (or soon) if you prefer your nightmares at home.

    Bring

    Final Take: Worth the Price of Fear

    If you approach Bring Her Back expecting a typical haunted-house flick, you’ll be unprepared. It’s darker, slower, more intentional. But that’s its strength. It doesn’t just want to scare — it wants to hurt gently, to explore the membranes between love, grief, and obsession.

    For genre lovers who cherish psychological horror over flashy jump scares, this is one to savor. For casual viewers seeking simple thrills, parts might feel oppressive. Still — Sally Hawkins’ feral heartbreak, the twins’ daring vision, and moments of genuine horror make this a must-watch in 2025’s horror lineup.

    Rating: ~ 3.75 / 5

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