• Latest
  • Trending
Are You There? Review

Are You There? Review: Between Science and Specter

Hello Stranger Review

Hello Stranger Review: A Prison of Your Own Choosing

Rise of Industry 2 Review

Rise of Industry 2 Review: Capitalism with Consequences

The Road to Patagonia Review

The Road to Patagonia Review: Two People, Four Horses, One Continent

The Wonderers Review

The Wonderers Review: A Quiet, Unflinching Family Battle

The Protector Review

The Protector Review: Purpose in a Post-Apocalyptic World

The Chambermaid Review

The Chambermaid Review: Upstairs, Downstairs, and a World of Secrets

Survival Kids Review

Survival Kids Review: Fun with Friends, A Chore Alone

Attack on London: Hunting The 7/7 Bombers Review

Attack on London: Hunting The 7/7 Bombers Review: The Anatomy of a National Wound

Monsters of California Review

Monsters of California Review: Slacker Comedy Meets Sci-Fi, and Neither Wins

f1

Brad Pitt’s F1 Accelerates to £7 M No. 1 Start in UK and Ireland

3 hours ago
james cameron

Cameron Critiques Nolan: ‘Oppenheimer’ Skips Hard Truths

3 hours ago
Studio

Cain Exit Forces Sunderland’s £450 m Crown Works to Hunt New Backer

3 hours ago
  • Home
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Gazettely Review Guidelines
Tuesday, July 1, 2025
GAZETTELY
  • Home
  • Movie and TV News
    f1

    Brad Pitt’s F1 Accelerates to £7 M No. 1 Start in UK and Ireland

    james cameron

    Cameron Critiques Nolan: ‘Oppenheimer’ Skips Hard Truths

    Studio

    Cain Exit Forces Sunderland’s £450 m Crown Works to Hunt New Backer

    Anna Maxwell-Martin

    First Look at Jimmy McGovern’s Unforgivable Reveals Gritty Liverpool Family Drama

    Clark Kent

    Superman’s Spectacles Get a Sci-Fi Upgrade in James Gunn Film

    Jurassic World Rebirth

    Tracking Split on ‘Jurassic World Rebirth’ as July 4 Box-Office Race Begins

    Valley of Hearts

    Turkish Hit ‘Valley of Hearts’ Lands New Global Deals

    A Useful Ghost

    Cineverse Picks Up Cannes Winner ‘A Useful Ghost’ for U.S. Release

    Sentimental Value

    Trailer Drops for Trier’s Cannes Winner ‘Sentimental Value’

  • Movie and TV Reviews
    Hello Stranger Review

    Hello Stranger Review: A Prison of Your Own Choosing

    The Road to Patagonia Review

    The Road to Patagonia Review: Two People, Four Horses, One Continent

    The Wonderers Review

    The Wonderers Review: A Quiet, Unflinching Family Battle

    The Protector Review

    The Protector Review: Purpose in a Post-Apocalyptic World

    The Chambermaid Review

    The Chambermaid Review: Upstairs, Downstairs, and a World of Secrets

    Attack on London: Hunting The 7/7 Bombers Review

    Attack on London: Hunting The 7/7 Bombers Review: The Anatomy of a National Wound

    Monsters of California Review

    Monsters of California Review: Slacker Comedy Meets Sci-Fi, and Neither Wins

    13 Days 13 Nights Review

    13 Days 13 Nights Review: Diplomacy Under Fire in Kabul

    Newly Rich, Newly Poor Review

    Newly Rich, Newly Poor Review: Charm, Class, and Comedy

  • Game Reviews
    Rise of Industry 2 Review

    Rise of Industry 2 Review: Capitalism with Consequences

    Survival Kids Review

    Survival Kids Review: Fun with Friends, A Chore Alone

    Ashwood Valley Review

    Ashwood Valley Review: Pretty Pixels, Poor Play

    Cattle Country Review

    Cattle Country Review: Forging a Life on the Pixelated Frontier

    Nice Day for Fishing Review

    Nice Day for Fishing Review: Casting a Strategic Spell

    Front Mission 3: Remake Review

    Front Mission 3: Remake Review: Come for the Mechs, Not the Makeover

    System Shock 2: 25th Anniversary Remaster Review

    System Shock 2: 25th Anniversary Remaster Review: Still the King of Sci-Fi Horror

    SAEKO: Giantess Dating Sim Review

    SAEKO: Giantess Dating Sim Review: Anxiety in Pixel Form

    Islands & Trains Review

    Islands & Trains Review: A Minimalist Escape

  • The Bests
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Movie and TV News
    f1

    Brad Pitt’s F1 Accelerates to £7 M No. 1 Start in UK and Ireland

    james cameron

    Cameron Critiques Nolan: ‘Oppenheimer’ Skips Hard Truths

    Studio

    Cain Exit Forces Sunderland’s £450 m Crown Works to Hunt New Backer

    Anna Maxwell-Martin

    First Look at Jimmy McGovern’s Unforgivable Reveals Gritty Liverpool Family Drama

    Clark Kent

    Superman’s Spectacles Get a Sci-Fi Upgrade in James Gunn Film

    Jurassic World Rebirth

    Tracking Split on ‘Jurassic World Rebirth’ as July 4 Box-Office Race Begins

    Valley of Hearts

    Turkish Hit ‘Valley of Hearts’ Lands New Global Deals

    A Useful Ghost

    Cineverse Picks Up Cannes Winner ‘A Useful Ghost’ for U.S. Release

    Sentimental Value

    Trailer Drops for Trier’s Cannes Winner ‘Sentimental Value’

  • Movie and TV Reviews
    Hello Stranger Review

    Hello Stranger Review: A Prison of Your Own Choosing

    The Road to Patagonia Review

    The Road to Patagonia Review: Two People, Four Horses, One Continent

    The Wonderers Review

    The Wonderers Review: A Quiet, Unflinching Family Battle

    The Protector Review

    The Protector Review: Purpose in a Post-Apocalyptic World

    The Chambermaid Review

    The Chambermaid Review: Upstairs, Downstairs, and a World of Secrets

    Attack on London: Hunting The 7/7 Bombers Review

    Attack on London: Hunting The 7/7 Bombers Review: The Anatomy of a National Wound

    Monsters of California Review

    Monsters of California Review: Slacker Comedy Meets Sci-Fi, and Neither Wins

    13 Days 13 Nights Review

    13 Days 13 Nights Review: Diplomacy Under Fire in Kabul

    Newly Rich, Newly Poor Review

    Newly Rich, Newly Poor Review: Charm, Class, and Comedy

  • Game Reviews
    Rise of Industry 2 Review

    Rise of Industry 2 Review: Capitalism with Consequences

    Survival Kids Review

    Survival Kids Review: Fun with Friends, A Chore Alone

    Ashwood Valley Review

    Ashwood Valley Review: Pretty Pixels, Poor Play

    Cattle Country Review

    Cattle Country Review: Forging a Life on the Pixelated Frontier

    Nice Day for Fishing Review

    Nice Day for Fishing Review: Casting a Strategic Spell

    Front Mission 3: Remake Review

    Front Mission 3: Remake Review: Come for the Mechs, Not the Makeover

    System Shock 2: 25th Anniversary Remaster Review

    System Shock 2: 25th Anniversary Remaster Review: Still the King of Sci-Fi Horror

    SAEKO: Giantess Dating Sim Review

    SAEKO: Giantess Dating Sim Review: Anxiety in Pixel Form

    Islands & Trains Review

    Islands & Trains Review: A Minimalist Escape

  • The Bests
No Result
View All Result
GAZETTELY
No Result
View All Result
Are You There? Review

Colorful Stage! The Movie: A Miku Who Can’t Sing Review: When Emotion Meets Rhythm

Lithgow Cast as Dumbledore in Max’s New ‘Harry Potter’ Series

Home Entertainment

Are You There? Review: Between Science and Specter

Caleb Anderson by Caleb Anderson
3 months ago
in Entertainment, Movies, Reviews
Reading Time: 8 mins read
A A
0
Share on FacebookShare on TwitterShare on PinterestShare on WhatsAppShare on Telegram

A single question whispered in candlelight can blur the line between life and death. Are You There? (2025) marks director Kim Noonan’s entry into psychological supernatural thrillers, with a script by Brian S. Tedeschi and Vicki Vass that probes the edge of personal reality.

At its center is Rosa Gonzalez, a paranormal psychology student who inherits a ritual candle from her late grandmother. Tasked with asking “Are you there?” as the flame bends toward “sí” or “no,” Rosa sets out to reconnect with her abuela. Early on, the ceremony feels like controlled inquiry, but soon the ritual’s response plunges her into a waking nightmare.

Noonan’s film unfolds at an unhurried clip, letting dread simmer rather than erupt. Shadows deepen in every frame, while moments of silence amplify the unexpected creaks and whispers around Rosa. Beneath the supernatural shimmer lies a portrait of grief and unresolved trauma—the real force haunting every flicker of flame.

Mapping the Unseen: Narrative Threads in Are You There?

Rosa’s story begins in a cramped student apartment turned streaming studio. As a paranormal psychology major, she documents rituals live for her YouTube audience—until her grandmother’s gift arrives: a brass candlestick inscribed with “sí” and “no.” That moment of inheritance functions as the film’s spark, transforming scholarly curiosity into a personal experiment with otherworldly consequence.

The first ritual offers tidy answers: a gentle bend of flame toward “yes,” a thrill that lures both Rosa and her viewers deeper. Early on, the film tracks her growing bond with roommate Natalie, whose off‑camera jokes lighten the mood, and Travis, the friendly passerby whose skeptical questions ripple through the narrative. Each “yes” and “no” carries more weight as reality and performance begin to blur.

Midway, a sudden accident shatters the controlled environment. A down‑the‑rabbit‑hole sequence of fractured memories—fleeting flashbacks of Rosa’s childhood and her abuela’s hushed advice—slides in without warning. It calls to mind Godard’s abrupt temporal jumps in Breathless, asking us to piece together events as Rosa’s mind splinters.

The climactic ritual plays out in long takes. Noonan holds our gaze on Rosa’s face as the flame wavers, echoing her internal showdown with a force she may have summoned—or created. In the final beats, light and shadow merge so completely that we’re left wondering if closure ever arrives.

Throughout, the editing pace is spare. Scenes drift into one another with elliptical cuts that feel pulled from an indie arthouse frame, even as the story nods to mainstream horror tropes. Moments of silence extend just beyond comfort, then snap with a creak or distant whisper. It’s a rhythm that challenges expectations—inviting viewers to sit with uncertainty rather than racing for answers.

Embodying Unraveled Reality: Performances & Characterization

Laura Sollet anchors Are You There? with a performance that feels lived-in rather than staged. In early scenes, she carries Rosa’s academic poise—arched brows and measured speech—like a student lecturing her online viewers. As the candle’s flame flickers, Sollet tightens her jaw, lets her eyes dart, and gradually shifts into raw vulnerability.

Are You There? Review

There’s a moment midway when she stands before the candlestick, breath caught in her throat, and every tremor in her hands speaks louder than any scream. It’s a physicality that calls to mind Jeanne Moreau’s precise gestures in Jules et Jim, conveying terror through the smallest muscle tics.

Eva Meyerson’s Natalie offers a warm counterpoint. She’s the friend who tosses off a lighthearted quip before the next scare, grounding Rosa’s spiraling reality. Their rapport feels unscripted, the kind of off‑the‑cuff back‑and‑forth I admire in Noah Baumbach’s slice‑of‑life dramas. When Natalie vanishes from the storyline, the absence echoes through later scenes—those empty frames underscore Rosa’s isolation.

Chase Bridges as Travis brings outsider skepticism. His tenor voice, steady even amid candlelit chaos, pulls Rosa—and us—back toward doubt. When he questions her motives, the power dynamic flips: Rosa’s authority as “expert” cracks, and Bridges’ calm intensity reminds me of an unflappable jazz bassist holding the rhythm section together.

Supporting players follow arcs that feel purposeful: a late cameo recontextualizes earlier dialogue, hinting at buried secrets. Most exchanges avoid stilted exposition; Tedeschi and Vass pepper in authentic asides—Rosa’s muttered frustrations at technical glitches, Travis’s half‑smiles when he’s out of his depth. It winds characters through believable shifts, transforming them from archetypes into people you’d actually invite over for coffee—if you dared.

Illuminating Dread: Visual & Sonic Craftsmanship

From its first frame, Are You There? feels painted in indigo and slate. Noonan leans heavily on practical candlelight—those small pools of amber glow—not only to puncture the gloom but to chart Rosa’s emotional arc. As her grip on reality loosens, the palette seeps into warmer reds and oranges, a choice that reminded me of the bold shifts in Godard’s color experiments. The result is a chiaroscuro effect that traps you in every corner of Rosa’s world.

Are You There? Review

Camera work is deliberate and intimate. Many shots sit static in Rosa’s apartment, walls closing in like the corners of a jazz club at 2 a.m., where every note feels magnified. Then, without warning, we drop into her POV: the frame teeters, breathing with her fear. Slow dolly moves or extended holds build suspense in a way that feels more art‑house than multiplex, nodding to the indie spirit of filmmakers like Greta Gerwig before her narrative swings mainstream.

Production design leans into Gothic touches—heavy drapes, tarnished brass of the candlestick, faded family photos. Mirrors recur as visual leitmotifs, doubling sense of instability: is that reflection another presence, or simply Rosa’s fractured mind?

Where practical effects shine—literally—in the candle’s wavering flame, some digital wobbles across later spirit sequences feel slightly out of sync, like a drummer off‑beat in an otherwise tight jazz ensemble. That said, these moments are sparse and quickly eclipsed by the film’s sound design.

The soundtrack is economical: a few unsettling piano chords, long stretches of silence, then sudden crescendos when the wick bends toward “sí” or “no.” Ambient creaks, distant whispers, and the tinny hiss of Rosa’s livestream audio ground the supernatural in everyday reality. It’s an approach that proves less can often be more, letting suspense arise from what we hear—or don’t hear—rather than relentless musical cues.

Hidden Currents: Themes & Subtext

Rosa’s candle rituals begin as a way to soothe her grief but quickly expose the raw edge of loss. Her grandmother’s death isn’t background noise—it’s the engine driving every whispered plea. The film treats memory like a jazz solo, looping back on itself with variations that feel both familiar and unsettled. Flashbacks fracture across scenes, making it hard to tell if we’re witnessing past regrets or waking nightmares.

Are You There? Review

Noonan keeps us guessing whether the terror comes from outside forces or from Rosa’s own mind. As a former psychology major, she leaned on academic frameworks for comfort; now she’s living those theories. It’s a modern spin on traditional supernatural horror, reframing parapsychology not as novelty but as lived experience.

The candle’s heritage anchors the story in Cuban rituals. That cultural thread grounds the supernatural in family history—her abuela’s guidance woven through each bending flame. It’s a reminder that trauma travels across generations, carried in heirlooms and whispered instructions.

At the same time, Rosa’s livestream antics critique our hunger for spectacle. Millions watch her experiments for amusement, yet none can step in when she spirals. There’s something sharply relevant about a starved-for-attention generation that still feels alone at peak follower counts.

Memory and perception shift like light through stained glass. Angled shots and quick cuts raise the question: when Rosa sees a shadow, is it real or a fragment of wishful thinking? It echoes the way Truffaut played with subjectivity in Jules et Jim, asking viewers to assemble truth from scattered pieces.

Finally, connection feels both vital and brittle. Natalie’s few warm scenes highlight the human touch Rosa craves, while her fans remain distant observers. The film asks whether real community can exist behind screens—and whether it can heal what candlelight cannot.

Behind the Frame: Direction, Screenplay & Technical Execution

Kim Noonan’s first feature shows a clear voice. She sets a steady tempo, allowing scenes to breathe before tightening the focus as tension mounts. From Rosa’s hushed preparatory moments to the sudden flare of dread when candlelight warps, Noonan trusts the audience to feel unease rather than spell it out. That restraint carries echoes of French New Wave tenets—think Godard refusing tidy explanations—and gives the film its measured pulse.

Are You There? Review

Writers Brian S. Tedeschi and Vicki Vass layer ambiguity into their structure. Early chapters feel precise: grounded academic chatter about parapsychology, naturalistic exchanges that mirror real online banter. But certain side arcs—like a subplot around Travis’s late arrival—fade without payoff, leaving narrative traces that hint at unrealized ideas. The core tension stays sharp, yet a few strands drift without clear resolution.

Editing choices underline Noonan’s approach. Long takes in Rosa’s apartment let dread set in, while abrupt cuts into memory fragments feel like a jazz drummer dropping a stuttered beat—unexpected but rhythmically appropriate. Some scenes linger just past comfort, reinforcing that slow‑burn anxiety. Cross‑cutting between ritual and flashback sometimes blurs clarity, asking viewers to piece together emotional truth rather than handing it over.

Working with a lean budget, the crew fashions clever set pieces: a single room becomes a shifting labyrinth of reflection and shadow. The small cast enhances intimacy; each performance fills the frame without feeling crowded.

Horror elements arrive sparingly. A handful of jump scares snap the stillness, but more often tension arises from what we hear—or don’t hear. Rules of the candle ritual are introduced with academic precision, then bent in later acts, keeping the film unpredictable while honoring its own logic.

Balancing Shadows: Strengths, Shortcomings & Audience

Are You There? rides on Laura Sollet’s tour‑de‑force turn as Rosa, a performance that marries fragility with steely resolve. Visually, the ritual imagery is striking: candlelight shifting from cool blues to molten reds becomes a language of its own. Noonan’s blend of psychological dread and supernatural tension feels deliberate, never trading depth for cheap scares. The film’s thematic tapestry—grief woven through cultural heritage, the isolation of influencer culture, and the slippery nature of memory—gives it a richness that lingers.

Are You There? Review

That ambition occasionally overreaches. Act II stumbles with underdeveloped subplots, leaving characters like Travis drifting in the margins. A few CGI spirit effects interrupt the otherwise tactile atmosphere, jolting us out of the film’s lived‑in reality. Narrative threads appear—then vanish—like a whisper in a drafty room, hinting at ideas that never fully materialize.

This is a picture for slow‑burn enthusiasts: if you appreciated the patient unease of Talk to Me or the character focus of 1408, you’ll find plenty to admire here. It favors mood and performance over spectacle, inviting viewers to settle into its shadowed corners rather than sprint through jump scares.

Even with its imperfections, the film offers a thoughtful study of trauma’s echo, more intimate and unsettling than your average ghost story.

Full Credits

Director: Kim Noonan

Writers: Brian S. Tedeschi, Vicki Vass

Producers and Executive Producers: Brian S. Tedeschi, Vicki Vass, Kim Noonan, Koji Steven Sakai, Stanley Yung, Mike Meade, Wayne Halper

Cast: Laura Sollet, Eva Meyerson, Madison Geiger, Mbeng Klovis, Chase Bridges, Kay Galvin, Maria Gajdosik, Nicholas Haren, Norah Daniel, Sarah Elisa Delanuez, Colin Glascott, Alyssa Hildenbrand, Ashlyn Horton, John Oliver, Isabelle Western

Director of Photography (Cinematographer): John Orphan

Editor: Travis Greene

Composer: Janet Phillips​

The Review

Are You There?

7 Score

Are You There? is an intimate, mood‑driven supernatural thriller anchored by Laura Sollet’s powerful performance and Kim Noonan’s measured direction. Striking visuals and a thoughtful exploration of grief and cultural heritage elevate familiar ghost‑story tropes, even as occasional pacing lags and uneven CGI momentarily pull you out. Its slow‑burn tension rewards patient viewers with an emotionally resonant experience.

PROS

  • Laura Sollet’s nuanced, emotionally charged lead performance
  • Rich atmosphere created by candlelit visuals and sparse sound design
  • Insightful exploration of grief, cultural heritage, and online isolation
  • Effective slow‑burn tension that favors mood over cheap scares
  • Creative indie production design and practical effects

CONS

  • Mid‑film pacing dips and uneven subplot resolution
  • Occasional CGI moments feel out of place
  • Some narrative threads introduced but never followed through
  • Limited development of supporting characters

Review Breakdown

  • Overall 0
Tags: Are You There?Brian S. TedeschiEva MeyersonFeaturedHorrorKim NoonanLaura SolletMadison GeigerThrillerVicki Vass
Previous Post

Colorful Stage! The Movie: A Miku Who Can’t Sing Review: When Emotion Meets Rhythm

Next Post

Lithgow Cast as Dumbledore in Max’s New ‘Harry Potter’ Series

Try AI Movie Recommender

Gazettely AI Movie Recommender

This Week's Top Reads

  • Ice Road Vengeance Review

    Ice Road: Vengeance Review – Liam Neeson’s Diminishing Returns Continue

    1 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • The Sound Review: A Long Way Down

    1 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Smoke Review: The Year’s Most Unpredictable and Unsettling Show

    7 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Love Island USA Season 7 Review: Summer’s Hottest Guilty Pleasure Returns

    1 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Mix Tape Review: A Story Told on Two Sides of a Cassette

    1 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Stand Your Ground Review: All Action, No Substance

    1 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Boglands Review: Shadows and Whispers in the Irish Mist

    2 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0

Must Read Articles

Foundation Season 3 Review
TV Shows

Foundation Season 3 Review: Streaming’s Most Ambitious Spectacle

6 hours ago
Jurassic World Rebirth Review
Movies

Jurassic World Rebirth Review: Technically Impressive, Creatively Extinct

7 hours ago
Heads of State Review
Movies

Heads of State Review: Elba and Cena Carry the Ticket

3 days ago
Squid Game Season 3 Review
Entertainment

Squid Game Season 3 Review: No Happy Endings Here

4 days ago
Love Island USA Season 7 Review
Entertainment

Love Island USA Season 7 Review: Summer’s Hottest Guilty Pleasure Returns

5 days ago
Loading poll ...
Coming Soon
Who is the best director in the horror thriller genre?

Gazettely is your go-to destination for all things gaming, movies, and TV. With fresh reviews, trending articles, and editor picks, we help you stay informed and entertained.

© 2021-2024 All Rights Reserved for Gazettely

What’s Inside

  • Movie & TV Reviews
  • Game Reviews
  • Featured Articles
  • Latest News
  • Editorial Picks

Quick Links

  • Home
  • About US
  • Contact Us
  • Advertise with Us
  • Review Guidelines

Follow Us

Facebook X-twitter Youtube Instagram
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Movies
  • Entertainment News
  • Movie and TV Reviews
  • TV Shows
  • Game News
  • Game Reviews
  • Contact Us

© 2024 All Rights Reserved for Gazettely

Go to mobile version