Forbidden Attic is not a fun horror movie. It's a traumatic one. It will frustrate viewers looking for a ghoul or a jump-scare demon. But for fans of The Babadook , The Orphanage , or The Night House , this is a five-star psychological dissection of guilt. The attic, in the end, is just a room. The real monster is the one we build inside ourselves to survive what we've done.
Additionally, the film relies a bit too much on the "scratched record" trope. The humming child gets a little less eerie the fifth time it plays. forbidden attic movie
The film is not without its slow patches. The second act leans heavily into domestic drama, as Ella tries to figure out why her husband is sleepwalking to the attic ladder, mumbling "I didn't mean to forget her." While Sweeney is excellent as the desperate wife who realizes she married a stranger, the marital arguments feel slightly recycled from The Shining or Hereditary . We get about 20 minutes of "You're changing!" / "You don't believe me!" that could have been trimmed for more attic exploration. Forbidden Attic is not a fun horror movie
There is a specific, almost primal dread associated with the "junk room." Not the curated, dusty nostalgia of a grandparent's basement, but the attic : the uninsulated, breathless apex of a house where heat, shadow, and forgotten time congeal. James Wan’s latest production (directed by relative newcomer Mia Hansen, in a stunning debut) takes this universal fear and unscrews the lightbulb. Forbidden Attic is not about jump scares—though it has a few doozies. It is about the archaeology of trauma. It asks a terrifying question: What if the ghosts in your house aren't trying to scare you away, but are trying to remind you of a crime you committed and buried? But for fans of The Babadook , The