Holy spider, araña sagrada

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Sinopsis(1)

Irán, 2001. Una periodista de Teherán se sumerge en los barrios con peor reputación de la ciudad santa de Mashhad para investigar una serie de feminicidios. Pronto se dará cuenta de que las autoridades locales no tienen ninguna prisa por resolver el asunto. Los crímenes son obra de un solo hombre, que asegura purificar la ciudad de sus pecados y que ataca a prostitutas por la noche. (Karma Films)

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Reseñas (4)

POMO 

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español Una historia iraní, inspirada en hechos reales y rodada de manera que los iraníes nunca se hubieran atrevido. La protagonista es una valiente periodista atea a quien el jefe de policía le falta el respeto con arrogancia cuando ella lo rechaza cortésmente. La búsqueda de un asesino en serie que ataca a las prostitutas es solo el primer acto, seguido de una reflexión sobre la mentalidad iraní dominada por el poder de la fe. De hecho, un número significativo de iraníes considera que «limpiar las calles de prostitutas» es una actividad piadosa. El centro de la narración y el personaje más complejamente retratado es el asesino, un buen hombre de familia que actúa de buena fe. Un drama brillante y estratificado que supera con creces las posibilidades temáticas de películas del género occidental similares y que no necesita interludios abstractos para cautivar incluso al espectador más exigente. ()

EvilPhoEniX 

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inglés Ali Abbasi serves up a hunt for an Iranian serial killer who murdered prostitutes in the horrific Mashhad in 2000-2001. The director quite cleverly attracts two camps of viewers, pleasing fans of serial killers and fans of disturbing Muslim culture, and it definitely works. A reporter arrives in Mashhad and decides to look for the killer, as the police have ignored the case and the victims keep coming. Zar Amir Ebrahimi won the best actress award and is definitely impressive. The film works well as a detective thriller where the killer is introduced to the audience quite early on, but it doesn't get in the way too much. The killer may not be all that interesting, he carries out all the murders in the same way and quite simply, he is the known as the Strangler, but it looks very realistic and authentic and you can feel the life being snuffed out of the victims. This is greatly aided by the eerie and unconventional setting based on Muslim culture and traditions. There is also a trial, which always pleases me, but the highlight was the fact that for many locals the killer was a hero as he murdered unclean women committing sins to Allah. The most powerful scene is the reporter's direct confrontation with the devil himself. The form is slightly televisual, but that can be forgiven. A decent film. 75%. ()

gudaulin 

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inglés I remember the comic by Riad Sattouf "One day you will be an Arab", where he processes his childhood experiences in the Syrian countryside. He describes the murder of a girl by her closest relatives as a punishment for an unacceptable love affair. The murderers became the most respected individuals in the local community and were presented as a moral example of society. Ali Abbasi didn't intend to make a regular thriller about a mentally disturbed sociopath. He was intrigued by the religious motive of purifying society from sin, which the perpetrator defended during his rampage in court, as well as the support of a significant part of the Iranian public that he enjoyed. Through his protagonist, the journalist Rahim, whom he confronts with the incompetence and prejudices of the local authorities, the director presents a bitter testimony of how the Iranian religious regime appears and operates. Abbasi, as an immigrant from the country where he spent his adolescence, understands and thanks to him, the Iranian realities look authentic, even though it was naturally filmed elsewhere. Audiences should not be surprised that it reveals more than usual in terms of both intimacy and violence, in order to create a compelling effect. The thriller element works smoothly thanks to the appropriate use of music and editing. The acting is flawless. Overall impression: 90%. ()

Remedy 

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inglés An honest police procedural and social drama, with an emphasis on Muslim antediluvian preconceptions of women's rights and "the meaning of life". I'll start with the latter – Ali Abbasi delivers it in such an incredibly evocative way that it truly helps the viewer get into the social discourse while also presenting some pretty compelling reasons (from the perspective of the local citizens). The opening is a thriller like something from Fincher and any ride through the darkened Iranian alleys filled with filth and vice will have atmosphere like crazy. One of the films of the year. [80%] ()