Mirrors

There is evil...On the other side.

6.3
20081h 51m

An ex-cop and his family are the target of an evil force that is using mirrors as a gateway into their home.

Production

Logo for Regency Enterprises
Logo for New Regency Pictures
Logo for Castel Film

Trailers & Videos

Thumbnail for video: Trailer

Trailer

Cast

Photo of Paula Patton

Paula Patton

Amy Carson

Photo of Amy Smart

Amy Smart

Angela Carson

Photo of Jason Flemyng

Jason Flemyng

Larry Byrne

Photo of Cameron Boyce

Cameron Boyce

Michael Carson

Photo of Arika Gluck

Arika Gluck

Daisy Carson

Photo of Ioana Abur

Ioana Abur

Front Desk Sister

Photo of Mary Beth Peil

Mary Beth Peil

Anna Esseker

Photo of John Shrapnel

John Shrapnel

Lorenzo Sapelli

Photo of Tim Ahern

Tim Ahern

Dr. Morris

Photo of Julian Glover

Julian Glover

Robert Esseker

Photo of Ezra Buzzington

Ezra Buzzington

Terrence Berry

Photo of Darren Kent

Darren Kent

Jimmy Esseker

Photo of William Meredith

William Meredith

Young Doctor

Photo of Irina Săulescu

Irina Săulescu

Mirror Person

Photo of Greg Nicotero

Greg Nicotero

Guy Playing Pool (uncredited)

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Reviews

J

John Chard

7.5/10

The mirrors. They're so clean.

Mirrors is the American remake of a little known Korean film called Into the Mirror. The plot has Kiefer Sutherland as a recovering alcoholic cop, who whilst on suspension is taken to working as a security guard at a large burnt out department store and starts to see terrifying images in the many mirrors about the place...

You would think that Mirrors was a flop. The critics hated it and the horror hordes were very much divided on it, the latter of which is to be fair the norm for any big horror movie release. Yet it didn't flop, it did very well at the box offices of the world and has a decent 6.2 average on IMDb, which for a divisive horror film is well above average.

Mirrors overstays its welcome, there really was no need for it to run to just under two hours in length. While elsewhere there's some pretty poor dialogue, parts of the screenplay are pointlessly soap opera in nature, while some thinking will make you scratch your head in bewilderment at events outside of the brilliantly monolithic department store.

However, does Mirrors create a genuinely spooky atmosphere (the interiors of the store are creep fest nirvana), insert some shock moments to jolt you out your seat? Is it visually stylish, with sound work to match? And does Sutherland (and to a degree Paula Patton as his wife) overcome the trite parts of the script and give effective and committed performances? The answer to those questions is yes.

Does the ending cop out in any way? Insult the audience? No! It doesn't do that either.

It has flaws, but they are not insurmountable for the horror fan who's just looking for some good scares, atmospheric dread and some stylish touches from the director (Alexandre Aja). If you haven't seen it then give it a try, judge for yourself, you might be pleasantly surprised at what you find. 7.5/10

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