The Woman in the Window

She has nothing to prove but what's real.

6.0
20211h 40m

An agoraphobic woman living alone in New York begins spying on her new neighbors only to witness a disturbing act of violence.

Production

Logo for Fox 2000 Pictures
Logo for 20th Century Studios

Trailers & Videos

Thumbnail for video: The Woman in the Window | Official Trailer | Netflix

The Woman in the Window | Official Trailer | Netflix

Thumbnail for video: Official Trailer

Official Trailer

Cast

Photo of Amy Adams

Amy Adams

Anna Fox

Photo of Gary Oldman

Gary Oldman

Alistair Russell

Photo of Fred Hechinger

Fred Hechinger

Ethan Russell

Photo of Wyatt Russell

Wyatt Russell

David Winter

Photo of Brian Tyree Henry

Brian Tyree Henry

Detective Little

Photo of Jennifer Jason Leigh

Jennifer Jason Leigh

Jane Russell 2

Photo of Jeanine Serralles

Jeanine Serralles

Detective Norelli

Photo of Mariah Bozeman

Mariah Bozeman

Olivia Fox

Photo of Julianne Moore

Julianne Moore

Jane Russell 1 (Katie)

Photo of Haven Burton Paschall

Haven Burton Paschall

Shelly (voice)

Photo of Ben Davis

Ben Davis

Steve (voice)

Photo of Tracy Letts

Tracy Letts

Dr. Landy (uncredited)

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Reviews

M

Manuel São Bento

2/10

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How many times have you heard something along the lines of "oh, this film has phenomenal actors, surely it must be great"? Obviously, countless examples defend or contradict this last statement, but unfortunately, the average moviegoer often gives more credit to the cast than to the director(s) and/or writer(s). This means that when a movie is truly amazing, actors receive the best compliments even if they didn't contribute as much as the other two filmmaking roles. However, when a film turns out to be a massive disappointment, the cast rarely gets the worst commentaries.

The Woman in the Window is the perfect example of a movie that should have never created high expectations. Contrary to what people might think, this Joe Wright's film went through non-stop delays, even before the pandemic began. Netflix wasn't even the original distributor, but the general audience doesn't care about production issues. If the cast boasts some well-known, fan-favorite actors, most viewers will highly anticipate that movie without ever thinking about who's directing or writing it. It's no surprise that this adaptation of A. J. Finn's novel is a strong contender for the following year's Razzies…

From the confusing editing work (Valerio Bonelli) - probably due to the constant re-edits - to the tremendously forced dialogues, Tracy Letts' screenplay is packed with problems concerning basically every single character interaction. The overall narrative is an utter mess that never finds its footing, ending in a convoluted, nonsensical, incredibly fake-looking film. Everything feels overdramatic, extremely fictional, and emotionless. Amy Adams, Gary Oldman, Julianne Moore, and all the other popular actors struggle so much with their scripts that some of them genuinely deliver an awful caricature of themselves.

Honestly, the only reason this doesn't get my lowest grade is due to a couple of actors that actually try to make the story a little less unbearable.

Rating: D-

K

Kamurai

8/10

Excellent watch, would watch again, and do recommend.

For Hitchcock fans, this is sort of a spiritual successor to "Rear Window", and an excellent one.

Amy Adams is fantastic, the story is detailed and quality through and through, and the presentation is on point.

This is good enough that I'm not going to risk spoiling the movie by going on here, but this is completely worth the watch.

You've reached the end.