IMDb RATING
5.6/10
6.1K
YOUR RATING
A family moving to a new house to live the dream of the big city. A house where dreams turn in nightmares.A family moving to a new house to live the dream of the big city. A house where dreams turn in nightmares.A family moving to a new house to live the dream of the big city. A house where dreams turn in nightmares.
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaIn real life, the number 32 of the street "Manuela Malasaña" in Madrid (where the film takes place) doesn't exist. The last number on that street is number 30. This is obviously intentional.
- GoofsAll entries contain spoilers
- ConnectionsFeatures Un globo, dos globos, tres globos (1974)
- SoundtracksLa vida sigue igual
Written by Julio Iglesias (as Julio José Iglesias de la Cueva)
Performed by Julio Iglesias
© Warner Chappell Music Spain, S.A.
Courtesy of Sony Music Entertainment España, S.L.
Featured review
Every horror movie needs a scare jump, or many for sure. But to abuse the scare jump and use it every single minute of the movie is overkill, and it's what gives scare jumps such a bad reputation.
In this movie they use the most monotone situations to use scare jumps along with an extremely annoying volume boost. So yes, at the 5 minute mark I started rolling my eyes, but the atmosphere sort of gave me something to keep watching.
Then again, lighting is all over the place, they open the door and its a pitch black apartment, next scene theres a lot of light coming in from the windows, it uses light to their convenience and not in a realistic way.
It is never clear why the characters are acting the way they are (brother, grandfather, girl in wheelchair (and her mother)), and even worse, the movie concludes with a "resolution" that doesn't really explains those situations.
I'm sad I wasted my "free On Demand movie" code for this. It is a waste of time, scare jumps and money.
In this movie they use the most monotone situations to use scare jumps along with an extremely annoying volume boost. So yes, at the 5 minute mark I started rolling my eyes, but the atmosphere sort of gave me something to keep watching.
Then again, lighting is all over the place, they open the door and its a pitch black apartment, next scene theres a lot of light coming in from the windows, it uses light to their convenience and not in a realistic way.
It is never clear why the characters are acting the way they are (brother, grandfather, girl in wheelchair (and her mother)), and even worse, the movie concludes with a "resolution" that doesn't really explains those situations.
I'm sad I wasted my "free On Demand movie" code for this. It is a waste of time, scare jumps and money.
- albertomtz
- Jul 5, 2020
- Permalink
- How long is Malasaña 32?Powered by Alexa
Details
Box office
- Gross worldwide
- $8,968,845
- Runtime1 hour 44 minutes
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 2.35 : 1
Contribute to this page
Suggest an edit or add missing content