The Uninvited is a flawed production, but gratifying in the way it delivers. The interesting and unique elements of the movie effectively compensate for the formulaic way in which the plot develops.
75
Chicago Sun-TimesRoger Ebert
Chicago Sun-TimesRoger Ebert
Emily Browning's face helps The Uninvited work so well...She makes you fear for her, and that's half the battle. Yet she's so fresh she's ready for a Jane Austen role.
70
L.A. WeeklyChuck Wilson
L.A. WeeklyChuck Wilson
A remake of the 2003 Korean horror film "A Tale of Two Sisters," The Uninvited is a Hand That Rocks the Cradle–type thriller that's been dressed up as a horror movie.
63
Chicago TribuneMichael Phillips
Chicago TribuneMichael Phillips
The actors are strong, however, and Banks in particular shows some skill and wiles in keeping her rascally stepmother stereotype lively.
60
Washington Post
Washington Post
Experienced horror fans will probably stay one step ahead of the game, but it's still a nice ride.
50
The Hollywood Reporter
The Hollywood Reporter
The film is still cheesy rather than deliciously scary. It never really generates sustained suspense.
The result is a middling Frankenstein-like hybrid of spectral mayhem and murder mystery, constructed entirely out of borrowed parts.
40
VarietyDennis Harvey
VarietyDennis Harvey
Weak even by the standard of uninspired recent Asian-horror remakes, The Uninvited is more likely to induce snickers and yawns than shudders and yelps.
25
Boston GlobeWesley Morris
Boston GlobeWesley Morris
A brutally inane movie.
16
Entertainment Weekly
Entertainment Weekly
Horror standbys like mangled corpses and stone-faced children pop up regularly, but sibling directors Charles and Thomas Guard haven't quite nailed the genre's rhythms.