The Offering

    The Offering
    2022

    Synopsis

    In the wake of a young Jewish girl’s disappearance, the son of a Hasidic funeral director returns home with his pregnant wife in hopes of reconciling with his father. Little do they know that directly beneath them in the family morgue, an ancient evil with sinister plans for the unborn child lurks inside a mysterious corpse.

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    Cast

    • Nick BloodArt
    • Emm WisemanClaire
    • Paul KayeHeimish
    • Allan CordunerSaul
    • Daniel Ben ZenouChayim
    • Sofia WeldonSarah Scheindal
    • Anton TrendafilovYosille
    • Meglena KaralambovaAida
    • Jonathan YungerLevi Siegelman
    • Velizar BinevMoishe

    Recommendations

    • 91

      IndieWire

      By combining genuine human drama and an exploration of a mysterious sacred text with a ridiculously entertaining plot about a child-stealing demon, the film serves as a reminder of all the things that horror is uniquely equipped to accomplish.
    • 75

      Collider

      The Offering won’t get any points for originality, but people looking for well-crafted horror can’t go wrong with Park’s latest film.
    • 70

      Los Angeles Times

      The plot is pretty routine, but its finer points about religious faith and rituals give the creep-outs and jump-scares real nuance. What makes this such a satisfying horror film is its cultural specificity.
    • 63

      RogerEbert.com

      Ultimately, my problem with so many religious horror films like “The Offering” is that they’re insulated in a way that makes them more often boring than terrifying, willing to let a languid pace try to set the mood instead of actual plotting.
    • 50

      Movie Nation

      The bar for this version of “J-Horror” is high (“The Vigil,” “The Possession”), but not so high that The Offering couldn’t have managed something fresh and more interesting and at least more sensible than this.
    • 50

      Variety

      The Offering does move along at a brisk clip, so it’s at no risk of being boring even as its potential to terrify dissipates. But it ends up illustrating the virtue of “less is more,” particularly when attempting a serious occult horror story
    • 50

      The New York Times

      A serviceable slab of possession horror.