The Devil's Backbone



1939, Spain.

It is the Spanish Civil War. Casares and Carmen operate a small orphanage in a remote part of Spain, along with the groundskeeper Jacinto and a teacher, Conchita. Casares and Carmen keep a large cache of gold to help support the treasury of the Republican loyalists, making this remote site a frequent target of Franco's troops; an unexploded bomb waits to be defused in the orphanage's courtyard.

When a small boy named Carlos arrives there, he believes that he is only staying until his father returns from the war. However, Carlos is about to learn that more than the living dwell here, as he starts seeing an apparition he cannot explain, and hears tales of a boy named Santi who disappeared the day the bomb showed up.

The Devil's Backbone (Spanish title: El espinazo del diablo) is a 2001 Mexican/Spanish Horror Film written and directed by Guillermo Del Toro. It stars Fernando Tielve, Íñigo Garcés, and Eduardo Noriega. del Toro has stated on the DVD that, along with Hellboy, this was his most personal project.

The Devil's Backbone contains examples of:

 * Black Eyes of Crazy/Creepy Child/Looks Like Cesare/Undead Child: Santi.
 * Boarding School of Horrors
 * Book Ends:
 * Chekhov's Lecture: Who knew that learning how prehistoric hunters took down larger prey would come in handy later?
 * Children Are Innocent: Deconstructed. While the orphans like most of the things children like, they are a complex bunch,
 * Dark Is Not Evil: Santi.
 * Death By Irony:
 * Family-Unfriendly Death: One class of children with spears vs. one adult bad guy.
 * Genre Savvy: Unlike characters in most Hollywood ghost stories, it actually occurs to Carlos to simply ask the ghost what it is he wants.
 * Ghostly Goals: Santi just wants his murder uncovered.
 * Hard Head: Averted.
 * Hot for Student: The primary villain has been having an affair with his principal since he was barely a teenager.
 * I'm Cold So Cold:.
 * Orphanage of Fear
 * Our Ghosts Are Different: Santi is caught in an existential loop until he can avenge his death.
 * According to Word of God on the (American release) DVD commentary, he is still in an existential loop after the end of the film. Also, the opening narration poses the question, what is a ghost? and one of the following lines suggests an insect trapped in amber. So presumably, all ghosts exist in that way.
 * People Jars: Pickled fetuses with the titular deformity.
 * Precocious Crush: One of the students has a wholesome crush on his teacher, but the villain had a less-than-wholesome crush on his own teacher when he was a student.
 * Saving the Orphanage
 * Undeath Always Ends: Averted.
 * Undeath Always Ends: Averted.