The Woman in the Yard
★ ★
There’s probably a very good movie somewhere in The Woman in the Yard, but this film manages to not find it. Despite a few highlights, namely solid acting and great cinematography, this is pretty boring horror.
The scariest parts of the movie are when the Woman (Okwui Okpokwasili), shrouded in all black, sits ominously on a chair in a farmhouse yard. And that stopped being compelling soon after her arrival.

The family faces the Woman in their attic
© 2025 Blumhouse Productions / Universal Pictures
Ramona (Danielle Deadwyler) is a very recent widow and now single mom to her teenage son Taylor (Peyton Jackson) and young daughter Annie (Estella Kahiha). Her husband David (Russell Hornsby) was killed in a car accident. Ramona is recovering from the same accident with stitches in a leg brace.
Ramona is emotionally distant, while her kids do their best to maintain a sense of normalcy. Taylor makes the meals and Annie practices writing the names of colors. Ramona is a shattered woman and she prays for strength in the morning before getting out of bed.

Okwui Okpokwasili as the Woman
© 2025 Blumhouse Productions / Universal Pictures
When the Woman appears in the yard, Ramona confronts her. The Woman knows an awful lot about the family and tells Ramona, “Today’s the day” before showing off her bloody hands. Ramona goes back inside the house and tells the kids that the Woman must be confused and wandered from a nearby senior care facility. The kids don’t buy the story.
The Woman herself can’t physically interact with the world—it’s her shadow that moves and throws objects. This gives her some range to raise chaos but becomes ineffective when the shades to the house are drawn.
The dynamic with Ramona, Taylor and Annie is well done. The acting is solid and convincing, and we develop enough of an attachment to the characters that we don’t want them hurt.

Danielle Deadwyler as Ramona
© 2025 Blumhouse Productions / Universal Pictures
The story is so committed to ambiguity that it ultimately loses clarity—and tension. It seems the filmmaking is so intent on keeping the audience in the dark that the menacing Woman becomes more of an annoyance than sinister threat. Sure, she can throw some pots around the kitchen, but little else. Things are kept so mysterious that the ‘big reveal’ has little umph.
It’s pretty obvious that the Woman is some sort of ideation of Ramona’s trauma. Played right, it could have been very compelling. But in the end, it’s just another shadow on the wall.
Rated: PG-13 for terror, some violent content/bloody images, suicide-related content, and brief strong language.
Running Time: 1h 28m
Directed by: Jaume Collet-Serra
Written by: Sam Stefanak
Starring: Danielle Deadwyler, Okwui Okpokwasili, Peyton Jackson, Estella Kahiha, Russell Hornsby
Horror, Mystery & Thriller