Watch horror Movies for free with Amazon Prime

Possession

1981
9
Director: 
Andrzej Żuławski

SYNOPSIS: 

In Berlin, in the 80s, the wall dominates the city. Mark, a former spy, returns home after his last mission, but his relationship with his wife Anna deteriorates. Mark investigates and discovers that Anna is living a second life with a mystery that she does not want to reveal.

REVIEW: 

Horror cinema is full of films considered "cursed", initially censored or banned, but then become true cult films. This is the case of Possession, a film that at the time left even the most expert critics speechless.

Difficult to classify, Possession is still a horror film: there are violent scenes, lots of fake blood, a monstrous creature and, above all, the representation of Evil in all its power. But it is also a much more complex film than the classics of the genre.

In 1981, Żuławski was already an established director. The film begins by telling, with obsessive and repetitive tones, the crisis of a couple, Anna and Mark (played by Isabelle Adjani and Sam Neill). Their relationship crumbles because of a betrayal, but soon something more disturbing emerges: in an apartment near the Berlin Wall, a mysterious entity is hiding. From the first scenes, we sense that Evil is already present in their relationship, in a subtle and ambiguous way.

Possession is not about a classic demonic possession, but about the theme of the double: Anna has a double in her kindergarten teacher, Mark sees his copy in the creature generated by his wife. This double becomes an element of chaos, leading the film towards an apocalyptic ending.

Here, possession is not a supernatural entity that takes control of a body, but the obsessive desire to shape the other in one's own image, to the point of destroying him. And it is precisely from this idea that true Evil is born: a power that spreads, overwhelms everything and presents itself with a reassuring face, like that of a father knocking on the door.

Tags: 

SIMILAR MOVIES REVIEWS

OTHER MOVIES REVIEWS

The House That Jack Built

2018

Yet another controversial and highly disturbing film, which confirms Lars Von Trier as a provocative and unconventional director. The House That Jack Built is an extremely raw authorial horror, designed for an audience with a strong stomach. The film follows a circular structure in which the color red is a recurring element. Von Trier mixes images of works of art, clips from documentaries on concentration camps, cartoons and fragments of his previous films, creating a complex interweaving of symbols and references. Through a powerful visual force, he tries to strike... Read More

Schock

1977

The latest cinematic chapter of the Italian master Mario Bava, Shock, presents itself as a farewell to his directorial career, emerging from a decade marked by a rebirth of Italian cinema imbued with anger, ambiguity and a fascination for the macabre. The film, a cross between giallo, thriller and horror, is a testimony to that essential contribution of Bava, which had already inspired entire generations of directors. In this work, however, one senses the loss of that personal imprint: the meticulousness in the photography, a distinctive sign that had made the director... Read More

Cube

1997

I couldn't wait to talk about this extraordinary Canadian film, which I consider without hesitation one of the best horror films of all time, so much so that it is in my personal top 5 of the genre. The director, Vincenzo Natali, is often unfairly underrated, but with Cube he has demonstrated a visionary talent that deserves full recognition. This is his first feature film, the film that made him a household name, and despite an extremely low budget (around $350,000), it manages to give the impression of a much more ambitious and refined work than one might expect. Its... Read More

only lovers left alive

2013

If you are fascinated by the world of vampires, this extraordinary dark film is an essential viewing. The film tells the immortal love story between Adam and Eve, masterfully played by Tom Hiddleston and Tilda Swinton. Their afterlife is immersed in a decadent and melancholic atmosphere, where the beauty of art and knowledge clashes with the decadence of contemporary society. With a refined gothic aesthetic and a touch of biting irony, the film is configured as a poetic reflection on the crisis of modern humanity, incapable of preserving the wonders that it has been... Read More

Strait-Jacket

1964

The film we are talking about is based on a story by the writer Robert Bloch, author of the famous horror masterpiece Psycho, a name that immediately evokes shivers and uneasiness. This film, however, is not supported by a particularly complex plot or by special effects that lift the skin, but rather by the extraordinary talent of the leading actress, Joan Crawford. In one of her last performances, Crawford stands as a central and dominant figure, a colossus of emotions that manages to convey to the viewer every single thrill, every anguish, every delirium that pervades... Read More