The Woman in the Yard

Don't let her in.

5.7
20251h 28m

In the aftermath of her husband's death, widow Ramona's struggle to raise her two kids is hindered by the arrival of a mysterious woman with supernatural abilities.

Production

Logo for Blumhouse Productions
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Trailers & Videos

Thumbnail for video: Official Trailer 2

Official Trailer 2

Thumbnail for video: Official Trailer

Official Trailer

Thumbnail for video: "Maybe She's Dead"

"Maybe She's Dead"

Thumbnail for video: Watch at Home Now

Watch at Home Now

Thumbnail for video: Only In Theaters Now

Only In Theaters Now

Thumbnail for video: In Theaters Friday

In Theaters Friday

Thumbnail for video: The Woman In The Yard Is...

The Woman In The Yard Is...

Thumbnail for video: Only in Theaters March 28

Only in Theaters March 28

Thumbnail for video: Only in Theaters March 28

Only in Theaters March 28

Cast

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Reviews

G

CinemaSerf

6/10

“Ramona” (Danielle Deadwyler) is hobbling around their remote rural home with her two, bored, kids “Taylor” (Payton Jackson) and “Annie” (Estella Kahiha) when they espy a woman, clad in black, sitting on a chair on the edge of their property. “Ramona” goes out to investigate and returns somewhat spooked. She locks them all in, but the disappearance of their yapping dog “Charlie” and lots of dark shadows cast across their house as their enigmatic visitor seems to get ever closer, sees the family get more and more nervous as home truths start to emerge and we learn just why she has her leg in a brace. This has a few moments of menace to it, especially as the lighting and the audio are used to quite good effect towards the end, but the remainder of this is missing too many elements to the story to make it very compelling. Nobody’s acting is up to much and the writing delivers dialogue and repetitious scenarios that struggle to stretch this short story out for ninety minutes. Nothing very new, here, sorry.

R

r96sk

5/10

'The Woman in the Yard' has a metaphor for all to see, though fails to craft anything else of note. For such a short movie (not even 90 mins), this noticeably dragged for me. It gets a little interesting towards the end, but even then doesn't make up for the meandering set-up.

Danielle Deadwyler is a decent lead, I can't say this'll stay at the front of my memory when thinking of her filmography though; 'The Piano Lesson' remains the one, so far. As usual when a film falls flat in most departments, I don't hold any blame with the cast anyway.

Most of the 'scares' come via cheap jumps, rather than anything truly uncomfortable. In fairness, there is one unsettling scene at the death but that's all I've got in terms of praise. With just one location and a few characters, greater writing and visuals were needed - for me, at least.

You've reached the end.