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This movie revolves around the story of bringing an evil spirit by a teenage girl, Vèronica, who suffers after the death of her father, as she can not get along with the matter, so one day during a solar eclipse, she by the help of her friends, use Ouija in order to make a contact with her father, but everything changes as she makes a connection with a demon and loses consciousness.
Aided by some great child performances, plenty of stylistic chutzpah and a strong sense of place, [Plaza] makes it work, despite the project's overall lack of finesse.
Its ideas aren't ultimately original enough or its scares potent enough to suggest Plaza wouldn't benefit from trying his directorial hand at someone else's screenplay.
Paco Plaza is good with imagery, from scorched mattresses to a yard full of school children staring ominously towards an eclipse through film negatives, to the aforementioned blind nun.
Despite a tendency to overdo it when it comes to the scares themselves, Paco Plaza's Veronica contains enough focus on character and symbolism to be an effective possession horror.