About Other
Other (2025) is a chilling French-Belgian horror thriller that masterfully blends psychological drama with surveillance paranoia. The film follows Alice, who returns to her isolated childhood home following her mother's mysterious death. What begins as a somber inheritance quickly descends into a nightmare when she discovers the house is meticulously rigged with hidden cameras and tracking devices, monitoring her every movement. As Alice investigates, a malevolent presence manifests, manipulating her environment and sanity, pushing her toward a horrifying truth about her family's past.
Director's atmospheric control is exceptional, transforming the familial home from a place of memory into a claustrophobic prison of technology and dread. The cinematography leverages tight spaces and unsettling angles to amplify the feeling of constant observation. The lead performance as Alice is compelling, portraying a believable arc from grief-stricken daughter to a woman unraveling under systematic psychological torment.
While the IMDb rating of 5.1 suggests a divisive reception, the film offers a potent critique of modern surveillance and inherited trauma wrapped in a slow-burn horror package. Fans of European psychological horror will appreciate its moody tension and ambiguous terror over cheap jump scares. Watch Other for a tense, thought-provoking exploration of grief, privacy, and the ghosts that live not in shadows, but in the cold glow of a camera's lens.
Director's atmospheric control is exceptional, transforming the familial home from a place of memory into a claustrophobic prison of technology and dread. The cinematography leverages tight spaces and unsettling angles to amplify the feeling of constant observation. The lead performance as Alice is compelling, portraying a believable arc from grief-stricken daughter to a woman unraveling under systematic psychological torment.
While the IMDb rating of 5.1 suggests a divisive reception, the film offers a potent critique of modern surveillance and inherited trauma wrapped in a slow-burn horror package. Fans of European psychological horror will appreciate its moody tension and ambiguous terror over cheap jump scares. Watch Other for a tense, thought-provoking exploration of grief, privacy, and the ghosts that live not in shadows, but in the cold glow of a camera's lens.


















