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Phoonk (film)

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‘Be warned… be very very warned…’

Phoonk (translation: ‘Blow’) is a 2008 Indian Hindi horror film directed by Ram Gopal Varma (nicknamed RGV and also director of RaatKaun?; Bhoot) and produced by Praveen Nischol starring Sudeep (also in Phoonk 2).

A sequel, directed by Milind Gadagkar, was released in 2010.

Plot teaser:

Civil engineer and atheist Rajiv (Sudeep) lives in Mumbai with his family of wife Aarti (Amruta Khanvilkar) and two kids, Raksha (Ahsaas Channa) and Rohan (Shrey Bawa), with Rajiv’s mother and the housemaid Laxmi (Anu Ansari). Rajiv’s most trusted colleagues are Anshuman (Kenny Desai) and Madhu (Ashwini Kalsekar), whom everyone, including Rajiv’s friend Vinay and Raksha feel are not normal.

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At a party at his house, when he comes to know that the husband and wife duo have cheated him on a valuable contract for an IT firm in Delhi, Rajiv fires both of them. Humiliated and angry, the two decide to take revenge.

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A series of strange events soon take place in and around Rajiv’s house. Mandar (Bharat Kaul), who is appointed to take the place of Madhu and Anshuman is mysteriously killed at the construction site. Raksha starts to talk and behave weirdly. Doctors are called, but the strange behaviour continues, with Raksha flying in the air, talking in a manly voice, acting in pain. The superstitious and religious grandmother repeatedly says that someone is using black magic…

Reviews:

Phoonk is easily amongst RGV’s finest works [although Bhoot was scarier] and it holds your attention all through. As a viewer, you’re keen to know how RGV would culminate this story. The culmination, of course, would meet with extreme reactions. Some would rubbish it, but the believers might endorse the finale. In my individualistic opinion, it’s outstanding!” Taran Adarsh, Bollywood Hungama

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“The second half of this film features most of what has come to be regarded as emblematic of every bad Varma film — character overload, unnecessary repetition of scenes and sequences, disjointed editing, jangling score, rehashed special effects and the most unsatisfying creative choice for the climax.” Elvis D’Silva, Reddiff.com

“The only good thing about the movie are performances by Kannada actor Sudeep and the child artiste, Ahsaas Channa. The girl has done a very good job, portraying a girl taken over by evil spirit… she is convincing and scary!! Sudeep plays the role of an atheist business man, who is a doting father and a good son! He fits the role very well and with his arrogance and attitude – he seems tailor made for this role! The role of his wife is played by Amruta Khanvilkar. She is quite awkward in the initial few scenes and slowly as the movie moves forward, she improves.” The World As I See It

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Cast:

Wikipedia | IMDb

 



Mallika

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‘The new face of beauty… and fear.’

Mallika is a 2010 Bollywood Hindi Indian supernatural horror film, produced and directed by Wilson Louis. The film was released on 3 September 2010 under the Glorious Entertainment banner. It stars Sameer Dattani and Himanshu Malik.

Plot teaser:

Sanjana is haunted by nightmares and vivid visions of a murder that took place in her house. Unable to take it any longer, Sanjana decides to go for a vacation, hoping that those visions will stop chasing her. She stays at a deserted fort-turned resort in Rajasthan. However, little does she know that things are going to go from bad to worse at the fort, which holds a dark secret…

Reviews:

“Now we don’t know why the film makers made this film. And we don’t know who they made it for? Is it for the usual horror film buff who has been recently wowed by stuff like Paranormal Activity? Is it for the comedy film buff who has just sampled the delicious satire Peepli Live and laughed his head off in Tere bin Laden? Or is it for the C-grade smut film viewer who anyway will end up grumbling despite the fact that the film has just two kind of scenes alternating with each other: a girl in a bath tub (or under a shower) and a girl in the bedroom. Why? Because the girls mostly resemble zombies and it’s hard to differentiate between the ghost girls and the flesh and blood girls…” Nikhat Kazmi, The Times of India

“Wilson tries to induce fear by creepy camera angles and background score, creating the feeling that something eerie is in store. He scores in constructing the anticipation of fear rather than scaring, as what ensues isn’t spooky. The film has some amazingly shot scenes and an effective but loud background score. The technicalities don’t account for an honorable horrifying feel, as the result is merely a natural reflex action to stimulus rather than fanatical fear. Also, there could have been some silent moments rather than being loud through out, for a better impact.” Pankaj Sabnani, Glamsham.com

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Cast:


1920 (Indian film, 2008)

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1920 is a 2008 Indian horror film written and directed by Vikram Bhatt. Filmed in Hindi, the film revolves around the events surrounding a married couple living in a haunted house in the year 1920. The film stars debutant actors Rajneesh Duggal and Adah Sharma as the married couple and was a critical and commercial success. The music of the film is composed by Adnan Sami with lyrics by Sameer.

A sequel 1920: Evil Returns was also released to mixed reviews and commercial success in 2013. After, the success of the first two instalments, the makers have decided to produce the third instalment 1920 London starring Meera Chopra and Diganth.

Plot teaser:

1920: Palampur in India. An architect arrives at a large haveli (manor house). The manager, MK, discusses how the owner of the haveli wishes to have it torn down and have a hotel constructed in its place. Later that night, the architect hears strange sounds, and when he goes out to investigate, he is killed by a mysterious force. It turns out the architect who was engaged before him was killed in a similar manner some time ago.

Another architect, Arjun Singh, is religious (he recites the Hanuman Chalisa every day) and devoted to his family; but he is also in love with Lisa. This meets strong disapproval from his family because Lisa (born of a British father and an Indian mother) is of mixed faith. Arjun decides to marry Lisa anyway. As he travels to Mumbai, his father and his brothers intercept his car, beat him up and try to burn Lisa alive. Arjun fights back and decides to disavow his faith (and thus, his family) for Lisa. He eventually uses logic and becomes an atheist.

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The haveli project is handed to Arjun’s firm, and Arjun and Lisa arrive at the haveli soon after. Strange things happen (sounds, objects moving by themselves). Arjun is unaware of the events, but Lisa soon senses a malevolent alien presence. Lisa questions Balwant (the caretaker and servant), but he feigns ignorance. He discusses the matter privately with MK, and earnestly pleads with MK to relieve Arjun and Lisa of the project for it will claim their lives just as it killed the others who came before them. The haveli does not wish to be destroyed, says Balwant, and that is why it reacts to anyone who wants to tear it down, including MK. (Balwant himself is unharmed because he is only acting on orders and does not carry an intent to destroy the haveli.) MK is aware of some evil presence, but he silences Balwant with a fat bribe.

Arjun leaves for Delhi on a business trip. Lisa experiences stronger events, and confides in a local church priest. At Lisa’s request, the priest arrives at the haveli, and immediately senses a strong evil presence in the main hall of thehaveli. Later that evening, in his church rooms, he experiences an evil force, and wakes up to find a Baphomet, drawn in blood…

Reviews:

“Without doubt, 1920 is amongst Vikram Bhatt’s finest works. In fact, it’s after a really long gap that Bhatt seems to be in complete command. Pravin Bhatt’s camera captures the mood splendidly. The beauty of the castle has been captured very well by the DOP. Adnan Sami’s music strikes a chord.” Taran Adarsh, Bollywood Hungama

“The selection of the cast by Vikram Bhatt is superb. His new faces in films — Dugal and Adah Sharma prove their self-confidence. Rajneesh has a talent, so a bright future lies ahead for him. The female lead in Adah Sharma is excellent. Anjori Alagh looks beautiful and leaves an impression in the second hour. Indraneel does well. Raj Zutshi plays the priest’s role very well. Overall, the movie is good as it fulfills its promise of providing enough scare.” SmasHits.com

“Cinematographer Pravin Bhatt spells his enchanting piece of work right throughout the film. The painted backdrops of beautiful locations of Allerton Castle in London are chilling for eyes while on the other end; he brings you the horrifying feel with unique lighting and camera angles. Adnan Sami isn’t so impressive with the songs, but his background score enhances the visual quality…” IndiaGlitz.com

Wikipedia | IMDb

 


The Dead 2: India

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The Dead 2: India is a 2013 British horror film written and directed by Howard J. Ford and Jon Ford. It is a sequel to the 2010 film The Dead, which was set in Africa.

Filmed in five weeks, in locations across India, including Rajasthan, Delhi and Mumbai, The Dead 2: India stars Joseph Millson, Meenu, Anand Goyal, Sandip Datta Gupta and Poonam Mathur.

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American engineer, Nicholas Burton (Joseph Millson, Devil’s Bridge), is toiling in the barren countryside of India, working on wind turbines and fretting about his girlfriend, Ishani (Meenu Mishra) who is 300 miles away on the edge of the slums of Mumbai, under the watchful eye of her disapproving father (Sandip Datta Gupta), who is about to get even more ruffled when he learns she’s pregnant. They will shortly have more to worry about as mother is in bed with a bit of a chomp wound. Elsewhere, a ship from Somalia, docks, one of the passengers stumbling off the ship, not quite himself since he was bitten by a crazy woman. In the cramped streets of the sprawling city, it isn’t long before his newly-found passion for eating human flesh has turned viral, sensible folk taking shelter behind the locked doors of their homes. Burton telephones Ishani and advises her to stay put whilst he makes his way to save her – his work colleague, nearer to the city, recommends avoiding heroics and getting to one of the planes which are shuttling foreign nationals out of the danger zone.

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300 miles suddenly feels more like 3000 for Burton and his initial attempts to get there via a parachute powered by a giant fan (no, really) are jettisoned as quickly as he is deposited on the desert floor. Fleeing, he meets an orphaned child, Javed (Anand Krishna Goyal), who is rather obliged to tag along, lest the film carry on with Burton talking to himself. Luckily, Javed knows his way around every inch of India, despite it being the world’s 7th largest country, and so can give his new mate, ‘Mr Nicholas’, the very best directions in their newly acquired car.

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There are inevitably mishaps across the desert and after abandoning their car, they ‘borrow’ a motorbike, only to have it nicked off them by a desperate local who needs to urgently visit his cannibalistic kids. After Javed is rescued by a Chinook loaded with refugees, Nick is forced to stagger through the burning sun alone, evading zombies and hoping his beloved hasn’t already become one of the shuffling rot bags. Will he honour his promise to meet Javed at the refugee camp? Will he get to the girl in time? Is mother hungry?

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Firstly, let us dispense with the formalities – if you didn’t like the first The Dead film, which is absolutely everyone I’ve spoken to about it, you aren’t going to be converted by this. Millson is a more accomplished lead but there again, he is given far more to do, as opposed to the silent and solemn mystery of The Dead’s protagonist. You will need something approaching titanium-strength tolerance to Javed’s constant appeals to ‘Mr Nicholas’ which ultimately borders more on the entrenched racism of Love Thy Neighbour than Eat Thy Neighbour. The rest of the acting is appalling, chief offender being Ishani, the whole thing being a terrible affair best forgotten.

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It’s easy to see why the Brothers Ford fancied another shot at relocating zombies to an unfamiliar locale, but that is also its failing. It is a complete re-run, the trek across the desert naturally being the same, apart from Nick apparently not suffering too much from thirst and having a side-kick. Our hero has a remarkable knack for avoiding being infected, unlike everyone else in the film who suffer particularly satisfying bites to the extremities – for all its faults, there is no questioning the cinematography or special effects. With an inexhaustible supply of bullets, it does feel like you’ve pressed ‘cheat mode’ on a computer game, a pleasing and quite believable twist at the end making such frippery just about palatable. Just to ensure the saris and turbans aren’t enough, the original soundtrack is re-used but with added sitar and rhythms. It’s an easy, no-brain watch but there are hints at real opportunity and the fact they largely go untapped is enormously frustrating.

Daz Lawrence, Horrorpedia

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Speaking about this sequel in Cannes, Howard J Ford  commented: “Jon and I knew we’d get around to making a sequel one day as there was plenty of scope to where we could take our idea of abject horror and emotional devastation presented against a stunning natural backdrop. But it was while we were escorting The Dead to various film festivals around the world, listening to the overwhelmingly positive feedback and reading all the Internet comments, that we felt compelled to make another film pretty quickly to satisfy the demand we knew was out there. We wrote the sequel frighteningly quickly, tapping into every constructive comment from true fans of the genre so we could make a film we feel we owe to all the people who supported The Dead“.

Jon Ford added, “We still felt our creative itches hadn’t been scratched and that we needed to continue our adventure into the living dead unknown. There just seemed to be too much talk and anticipation about us making another zombie movie we couldn’t ignore. So we thought let’s do it! Part of the magic of The Dead was its minimalism both in terms of dialogue and how it played out in the road movie style. Not everyone was going to get that and we knew it. So we decided to embellish the story this time with a few more mainstream elements without losing what was so special about the first film”.

Howard concluded, “There was a tenderness to The Dead that thankfully people loved and the character connections are what many warmed to. Thus it was important to include those aspects again and add to them, because we want The Dead 2: India to pull on your heartstrings as much as we want the exciting and violent elements to thrill you”.

 

Related: living deadzombies


Dahshat

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Dahshat — दहशत translation: “Scare” — is a 1981 Bollywood Indian horror film directed by Shyam Ramsay and Tulsi Ramsay from a screenplay by producer Kumar Ramsay.

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It stars Om Shivpuri, NadiraNavin Nischol, Sarika, Narendranath, Rajindernath, Chand Usmani, Kajal Kiran, Dev Kumar, Bharat Bhushan and Jayshree T. The soundtrack was composed by Bappi Lahiri there are songs sung by Bappi himself along with Asha Bhosle and Sulakshana Pandit.

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Plot teaser:

Dr. Vishal, a mad scientist (Om Shivpuri), turns into a bloodthirsty monster at night as result of an experiment that goes wrong when his wife (Nadira) injects him with a fatal chemical…Dahshat 1981 Hindi horror monster

Reviews:

“The production is shoddy, the editing is unexciting, and the camera work is lazy… all of these problems aside, the film does have a cool monster… Tim Paxton, Monster! fanzine

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Wikipedia | IMDb

 


Tahkhana

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Tahkhana (तहखाना “Dungeon”) is a 1986 Bollywood Indian horror film directed by Shyam Ramsay and Tulsi Ramsay (Darwaza). It is a tale about two sisters separated at birth and the search for a hidden treasure which is guarded in a dungeon by a bloodthirsty monster.

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It stars Hemant Birje, Arati Gupta and Kamran Rizvi, Narendranath, Puneet Issar Imtiaz Khan, Sheetal, Priti Sapru, Trilok Kapoor, Amarnath Chatterji, Huma Khan, Rajindernath and Shamsuddin. The soundtrack music was composed by Ajit Singh with songs sung by Amit Kumar, Anuradha Paudwal and Sushma Shreshtha.

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Plot teaser:

Dying Thakur Surjeet Singh bequeaths his entire estate to his son, Raghuvir, disowning the other, Dhurjan, the family’s black sheep, who also indulges in black magic. The latter swears to use magical powers to usurp the estate, and even arranges the abduction of Raghuvir’s daughters, Sapna and Aarti. Mangal and his men manage to apprehend Dhurjan, imprison him in a dungeon, and rescue Aarti.

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However, they are unable to locate Sapna, and Raghuvir is killed. Before dying, he informs Mangal that Sapna has one of two pieces of a locket around her neck, while the other is on Aarti’s, and when joined together will reveal the location of treasure buried in a dungeon.

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Twenty years later, Aarti and her boyfriend, Vijay, along with several others, attempt to unearth the treasure – not realising that they not only face betrayal from one of their own, but will also release and fall prey to an ageless and indestructible entity…

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Buy Tahkhana + Mahakaal on Mondo Macabro DVD from Amazon.com

Reviews:

“Yeah, the monster looks like a busty Howard Stern with a skin condition and the obligatory comedic sketches are jarringly incongruous, but there is a lot of fun to be had with this picture.

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The sets and cinematography are sensational, the music and acting are gleefully camp, the direction is quietly effective and the filmmakers don’t hesitate to knock off main characters with unexpected relish. If you are looking to expand your horror-fiend horizons or if you like a dose of levity with your fright-films, Tahkhana will not disappoint.” Terror Transmission

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“A monster movie at its heart, the film wastes little time with unnecessary comedic relief, relying instead on action, thrills and a couple of prerequisite musical numbers to flesh out a familiar story that, at the time, Indian audiences could not get enough of. While rather straightforward in its delivery, there are thankfully plenty of “what the?” moments for those looking for something out of the ordinary to enjoy…” Jason McElreath, DVD Drive-In

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“As slow as the monster may stalk, the pace of Tahkhana moves rather quickly, a stark contrast to many of its ilk. Sure, there’s some inconsequential padding tossed into the mix, but it’s almost always amusing, thanks to a cast of characters that are diverse and interesting. It’s also worth noting that the majority of the comedy present actually hits home; that isn’t to say it isn’t goofy and inappropriate as all hell though.” KamuiX, Infini-Tropolis

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“Given the nature of Tahkhana’s Big Bad, the whole film feels more like an adventure movie with an added monster than the sort of silly yet loveable and enthusiastic scream fest I by now expect of a Ramsay film. That’s not to say Tahkhana is a bad film; it is entertaining enough. I just don’t think it shows the Ramsay Brothers at their best.” The Horror!?

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Indian horror on Horrorpedia: 19201920: Evil Returns | Aatank | Aatma (2006) | Agyaat | Bandh Darwaza | Bach ke ZaraBees Saal Baad | Bhoot Returns | Cape Karma | Dahshat | Darling | Darwaza (1978) | Dracula 2012 | Ek Thi Daayan | Horror Story | Khooni Panja | Mallika | PhoonkPizza | Purana Mandir | Purani Haveli | Qatil Chudail | Ragini MMS | TahkhanaVeerana (1988)

Wikipedia | IMDb


Nagin

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Nagin (English translation: “Female Snake”) is a 1976 Indian Hindi horror fantasy film produced and directed by Rajkumar Kohli. It features a huge ensemble cast including Sunil Dutt, Reena Roy, Jeetendra, Feroz Khan, Sanjay Khan, Vinod Mehra, Kabir Bedi, Rekha, Yogeeta Bali and Mumtaz.

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It was inspired by François Truffaut’s film The Bride Wore Black, based on Cornell Woolrich‘s novel of the same name. The film was later remade in Telugu as Devathalara Deevinchandi (1977) with Jayamalini in the Nagin role. It was also remade in Tamil with Sripriya playing the Nagin role in the film Neeya.

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Rajkumar Kohli re-made the film in 2002 with his son in the cast, as Jaani Dushman: Ek Anokhi Kahani, which fared poorly and generated negative reviews; critics blamed the poor screenplay and direction as the result of the failure.

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Plot teaser:

According to a myth, when snakes are of certain age, they can assume human form. Thus, the film begins with a male and a female in their human forms, singing and dancing amorously with each other. When the male turns back into a snake, he is shot by a member of a hunting party, who thought the snake was going to attack the woman. The rest of the story deals with the female taking revenge on the group of friends responsible for her lover’s death…

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Cast:

Wikipedia | IMDb


Alone (2015)

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Alone is an upcoming Hindi Indian horror film directed by Bhushan Patel – who previously helmed hit Indian horror films 1920: Evil Returns and Ragini MMS - from a screenplay by Sheershak Anand and Shantanu Ray Chhibber.

It stars Bipasha Basu (You Must Be ScaredAatma; Creature), Karan Singh Grover and Zakir Hussain (Vaastu ShastraDarling; Phoonk) in pivotal roles. It marks the film debut of Grover.

The film is being released on January 16, 2015. It is the Bollywood remake of the 2007 Thai film of the same name, which was remade in Kannada and Tamil in 2012 as Charulatha and remade in Malayalam as Geethaanjali.

Plot teaser:

Conjoined at birth, Anjana and Sanjana were twin sisters who lived by one promise made to each other – ‘We will always be together. We will never separate’. Mysterious circumstances lead to the death of one while the other survives. Years later, the ghost of the dead comes back to haunt the surviving sister…

 

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Wikipedia | IMDb | Facebook



Ghoul – folklore

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A ghoul is a folkloric monster or evil spirit associated with graveyards and consuming human flesh, often classified as undead. The oldest surviving literature that mention ghouls is likely One Thousand and One Nights. The term was first used in English literature in 1786, in William Beckford’s Orientalist novel Vathek, which describes the ghūl of Arabian folklore.

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A being which is largely misrepresented or used as a ‘catch-all’ to describe anything from vampires, zombies or other mythical creatures, a ghoul has habits and behaviour which can make it far more distinct. Despite this, even today it is used as a general phrase to describe someone (or something) who displays a macabre love of death or torture, especially any frowned-upon activities taking place in graveyards.

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The word ‘ghoul’ is derived from the Arabic غول ghūl, from ghala, “to seize”. The term is etymologically related to Gallu, a Mesopotamian demon who dragged mortals into the Underworld and was widely understood to be appeased by the sacrificial slaughter of a lamb. Once the tale One Thousand and One Nights was translated into French by Antoine Galland, the concept of the ghoul entered Western lore.

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In ancient Arabian folklore, the ghūl (Arabic: literally demon) dwells in burial grounds and other uninhabited places. The ghul is a fiendish type of jinni believed to be sired by Iblis, the Muslim God of darkness. Ancient accounts refer to ghūls as generally being female, distracting male travellers before killing and consuming them. When faced with such a foe, the only way of escape was to kill the ghul with one blow; a second or more would resurrect it from the dead.

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A ghoul is also a desert-dwelling, shapeshifting, demon that can assume the guise of an animal, especially a hyena. It lures unwary people into the desert wastes or abandoned places to slay and devour them. The creature also preys on young children, drinks blood, steals coins, and eats the dead, then taking the form of the person most recently eaten.

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In the Arabic language, the female form is given as ghoulah and the plural is ghilan. In colloquial Arabic, the term is sometimes used to describe a greedy or gluttonous individual. Anglicized as “ghoul,” the word entered English tradition and was further identified as a grave-robbing creature that feeds on dead bodies and on children, the former offering a clear difference between ghouls and zombies. In the West, ghouls have no specific image and have been described (by Edgar Allan Poe) as “neither man nor woman . . . neither brute nor human.” They are thought to assume disguises, to ride on dogs and hares, and to set fires at night to lure travelers away from the main roads. They can often be detected by hoof marks in the ground near graveyards.

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There are many cultural references to ghouls throughout the ages:

One Thousand and One Nights is the earliest surviving literature that mentions ghouls, and many of the stories in that collection involve or reference ghouls. A prime example is the story “The History of Gherib and His Brother Agib”, in which Gherib, an outcast prince, fights off a family of ravenous ghouls and then enslaves them and converts them to Islam.

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Lord Byron made a reference to the ghouls in his epic poem “The Giaour” (1813): “Thy gnashing tooth and haggard lip; / Then stalking to thy sullen grave, / Go – and with Gouls and Afrits rave; / Till these in horror shrink away/ From spectre more accursed than they!”

In Hans Christian Andersen’s literary fairy tale, “The Wild Swans” (1838), the heroine Eliza has to pass a group of ghouls feasting on a corpse.

Edgar Allan Poe mentions ghouls in the despairing fourth section (“Iron Bells”) in his 1848 poem “The Bells”, describing them and their king as “the people, they that dwell up in the steeple” tolling the bells and glorying in the depressive effect on the hearers. “They are neither man nor woman— / They are neither brute nor human— / They are Ghouls.” His 1847 poem “Ulalume” also features ghouls.

Harry Shannon’s 2006 horror novel Daemon features a portrayal of a ghoul as an undead creature.

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The Morlocks in H.G. Wells’ The Time Machine may have been inspired by the idea of a ghoul. Though subterranean, they feed on the living Eloi, not the dead.

In the short story “The Nameless Offspring” (1932) by Clark Ashton Smith, the ghoul is a cannibalistic humanoid which, besides eating the flesh of human corpses, procreates with those buried while still alive.

In the fiction of H. P. Lovecraft, a ghoul is a member of a nocturnal subterranean race. Some ghouls were once human, but a diet of human corpses, and perhaps the tutelage of proper ghouls, mutated them into horrific bestial humanoids. In the short story “Pickman’s Model” (1926), they are unutterably terrible monsters; however, in his later novella The Dream-Quest of Unknown Kadath (1926), the ghouls are somewhat less disturbing, even comical at times, and both helpful and loyal to the protagonist. Richard Upton Pickman, a noteworthy Boston painter who disappeared mysteriously in “Pickman’s Model”, appears as a ghoul himself in Dream-Quest. Similar themes appear in “The Lurking Fear” (1922) and “The Rats in the Walls” (1924), both of which posit the existence of subterranean clans of degenerate, retrogressive cannibals or carrion-eating humans. This theme is elaborated on in Anders Fager’s “Grandmother’s Journey” in which a large family have degenerated (or changed) into a brood of sub-human beast men. Pickaman’s Model is also featured as a tale in Rod Serling’s TV series, The Night Gallery.

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The November 1973 issue of Skywald Publications’ Psycho comic-magazine was an “all ghoul” edition.

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In Neil Gaiman’s novel The Graveyard Book, ghouls are small, ape-like creatures who make their home in an extra-dimensional realm called Ghûlheim. They travel to our world through ghoul-gates, and name themselves after the first person they eat on becoming a ghoul.

In 1987, Brian McNaughton wrote a series of dark fantasy short stories in which these Lovecraftian ghouls are the protagonists. The stories, collectively published as The Throne of Bones, were a critical success and the book went on to receive a World Fantasy Award for Best Collection.

In P.B. Kerr’s Children of the Lamp, ghouls (spelled as “Ghuls”) are one of the six tribes of djinn, and one of the three evil tribes.

In Larry Niven’s Ringworld series, the ghouls are a race that eats the dead of the other races that live on the ringworld. They have a fairly sophisticated (for a post-apocalyptic people) culture, and are the only race with a communication system that traverses the entire ringworld: heliographs.

In J.K. Rowling’s Harry Potter series, ghouls are harmless creatures that live in the homes of wizards, making loud noises and occasionally groaning; a ghoul resides in the attic of the Weasley family’s home as the family’s pet. Context implies that in the Harry Potter universe, ghouls are closer to animals than human beings. They are translated in some versions as vampire, although they have nothing to do with the creatures.

In Laurell K. Hamilton’s Anita Blake series, graveyards became infested with ghouls when the blessing of the graveyard was used up; this was usually caused when too many zombies were raised or voodoo rituals of evil nature were performed in the graveyard. That, or numerous animators (or people who possess magic related to the dead) are buried in the graveyard. Though they were once human, they are like lone wolves, and they are not very smart. The only reason Zach’s ghouls stayed and worked together was because Zach was controlling them. They will only attack if a person is vulnerable. A ghoul will run from a healthy, strong human being, and is afraid of fire. Like zombies, ghouls have human strength, but seem stronger because the sensations of pain and the ‘governors’ that keep people from ripping their bodies apart died with them. So while a human would stop trying to punch a hole in a steel door because of the pain a zombie or ghoul would keep trying until stopped or the door broke even if it would mean completely destroying their arm in the process.

In Jim Butcher’s The Dresden Files, ghouls are much like they are in the classic mythologies: humanoid monsters that feed on human flesh, and seem to be able to disguise themselves as ordinary humans. These ghouls are intelligent, as opposed to being mindless and feral monsters.

In Chelsea Quinn Yarbro’s St. Germain series, the ghoul is an undead being created through an ancient Egyptian ritual to act as a servant to a vampire. St. Germain comes across a dying slave and resurrects him as his faithful servant, Roger, who accompanies him through his adventures for the next 2,000 years. Roger is indistinguishable from humans except for his immortality and that his diet consists of raw meat. In her book Cautionary Tales, there is a short story about a teenage ghoul, working the graveyard shift in a morgue, eating parts of unclaimed dead people.

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Caitlín R. Kiernan has written a number of short stories and novels featuring ghouls (referred to as the ghul), including “The Dead and the Moonstruck” and “So Runs the World Away” (both from To Charles Fort, With Love, 2005), Low Red Moon, Murder of Angels, and Daughter of Hounds. Kiernan’s ghouls exhibit a blend of human and canine traits, are highly intelligent, live in subterranean cities, possess magical powers, and feed on the flesh of human corpses. According to Daughter of Hounds, they seem to have an extraterrestrial origin. They are often referred to as “The Hounds of Cain.”

In R.L. Stine’s Attack of the Graveyard Ghouls, ghouls are depicted as non-corporeal green mists that were humans at one point of time, and are able to steal bodies.

In the manga Rosario + Vampire, ghouls are a type of mindless, cannibalistic monster that are created in two manners. Ordinary ghouls are created when an evil spirit possesses a corpse. Rarely, ghouls are created when a human repeatedly has monster blood injected into their veins. The monster blood grants the ghoul supernatural power but at the same time destroys the psyche, leaving them a mindless killing machine. They resemble vampires but are easily identified by the web-like marking surrounding the bite mark where the monster blood was injected and their complete lack of self-control. The lead male character, Tsukune Aono, eventually becomes one such ghoul due to the continuous intake of vampiric blood from Moka Akashiya. Although thanks to some intervention he was able to regain almost all of his humanity and senses by having the vampire blood sealed through a Holy Lock. Although, for a time, there’s still a danger he’ll revert to a ghoul again. Eventually, Tsukune overcomes the vampire blood and becomes a full fledged vampire himself.

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Although many screenplays have featured ghouls, the first major motion picture of this theme was the 1933 British film entitled The Ghoul. Boris Karloff plays a dying Egyptologist who possesses an occult gem, known as The Eternal Light, which he believes will grant immortality if he is buried with it, and thereby able to present it to Anubis in the afterlife. Of course, his bickering covetous heirs and associates would rather keep the jewel for themselves. Karloff vows to rise from his grave and avenge himself against anyone who meddles with his plan, and he keeps this promise when one of his colleagues steals the gem after his death.

In 1968, George A. Romero’s groundbreaking film Night of the Living Dead combined reanimated corpses (zombies) with cannibalistic monsters (ghouls), creating new film monsters more terrifying than either of their predecessors. The term “ghoul” was the one actually used in the film, though as we now know, the beings in Romero’s film exhibit the habits of zombies, in that they crave live human flesh, not that of corpses.

The 1976 Turkish movie Milk Brothers (based on H. Rahmi Gurpinar’s story, “Ghoul”) is a comedy in which ghouls feature prominently.

The 1975 British film The Ghoul (unrelated to the Karloff vehicle) stars Peter Cushing as a defrocked missionary whose son has developed a taste for human flesh while travelling in India. As the son’s mind and body degenerate, Cushing has several young people dispatched and prepared as food for his offspring, whom he keeps locked up in the attic.

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The 1980 anthology film The Monster Club featured a segment about a village of ghouls stumbled upon by an unwary traveller (Stuart Whitman), who temporarily escapes the creatures with the help of one half-human girl, but he is recaptured when it turns out that the ghouls have representatives inhabiting our normal human world.

In the anime and manga series Hellsing, ghouls are zombie-like creatures that are created when a “chipped” (technological) vampire drains a victim to death, or, in the Manga, where a vampire drains the blood of someone who is not a virgin. If fatally wounded, they instantly crumble to dust. They are under the control of the vampire who bites them, eat human flesh, and are intelligent enough to use firearms. It is not rare to see a vampire amass a small army of ghouls for offence and defence

In Cannibal Flesh Riot, the 2006 film directorial debut of Children’s Book Author and illustrator Gris Grimly, two ancient ghouls, Stash and Hub, prowl cemeteries by night digging up the decaying bodies of the deceased to feed on their rotting flesh.

In I Sell the Dead, the 2008 film directorial debut of Glenn McQuaid, a comedy horror film about two grave robbers and their escapades, once they discover the prospects of the grave robbing of supernatural entities, their title goes from grave-robbers to ghouls .

The Batman comics-based franchise, including the 2005 movie, Batman Begins, has an antagonist named Rā’s al-Ghūl, whose name derives from the original Arabic name for the star Algol in the constellation Perseus meaning “the monster’s (i.e. Medusa’s) head”.

Daz Lawrence

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Mahakaal aka The Monster

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Mahakaal aka The Monster and Time of Death is a 1993 Indian horror film directed by Shyam Ramsay and Tulsi Ramsay (Darwaza; Purana Mandir; Veerana) from a screenplay by Y.V. Tyagi and Sayeed Sultan, based on the American horror film A Nightmare on Elm Street.

The film soundtrack was composed by Anand–Milind, and the background score was composed by K. J. Sing and Vishal. Mahakaal was released on DVD in the US by distributor Mondo Macabro in 2009.

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Cast:

Karan ShahArchana Puran SinghReema LagooJohnny LeverKulbhushan Kharbanda, Baby Swetha, Sunil Dhewan, Asha Patel.

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Plot teaser:

A demon torments the family and friends of Anita (Archana Puran Singh) in order to take avenge his death, which was caused by her police officer father. wWith the help of her boyfriend, Anita is forced to tackle the demon …

Mahakaal-The-Monster-Mondo-Macabro-DVD

Buy on DVD from Amazon.com | Amazon.co.uk

Reviews:

‘The plot for Mahakaal: The Monster feels strung together and it wears out its welcome long before its predictable happy ending. The horror related scenes in the film are very good and at times exceptionally executed. The comedy and song dance parts of the film are painful to watch and not in a terrifying way. At least during one of the musical numbers one of the leading ladies is drenched with water.’ Michael Den Boer, 10k Bullets

‘The film maintains several inventive kills from the series, as well as the boiler room atmosphere, complete with metal chains hanging from the ceiling for no reason other than they look cool swinging back in forth in the fog, and goes so far as to replicate segments of Charles Bernstein’s original score. While the demonic villain in Mahakaal can’t hold a candle to Robert Englund’s Freddy, the beast holds his own in regards to past Bollywood monsters, though is decidedly more human in comparison to his often Sasquatch-like counterparts.’ Jason McElreath, DVD Drive-In

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‘ …a frustrating piece of work. Despite being, at times, genuinely creepy, and adding a few inventive touches of it’s own, it ultimately fails, because the story changes leave it thematically weaker, and the directors are unwilling or unable to transcend the limitations and demands of the “Bollywood” commercial film-making formula.’ Simon Powell, Classic-Horror.com

 

Fear Without Frontiers Jay Schneider FAB Press

Buy Fear Without Frontiers from Amazon.com | Amazon.co.uk

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Pyasa Shaitan

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Pyasa Shaitan

Pyasa Shaitan – which translates as “Thirsty Devil” is a 1984 Indian Hindi horror film directed by actor Joginder Shelly (Son of Dracula) who also stars. It also features Kamal Haasan (as the vampire), Madhu Malhotra, Shobha Lata and Beena Banerjee.

The film is apparently a re-edited version of the 1978 Tamil film Vayanadhan Thamban with added scenes of Joginder Shelly as The Devil and a rape scene featuring Beena Banerjee.

Plot teaser:

Shaitaan (Joginder) needs to sacrifice seven young women so that he can attain immortality.

He stumbles upon a man (Kamal Hassan), who had been worshipping Satan himself for many-many years. The man has grown old and also wishes to stay young forever. Shaitan signs a deal with him, granting temporary youth at first, that will become eternal after the sacrifice of the 7th and last young woman…

Reviews:

‘There is such a steady assault of disconnected strange shit in this movie that it flirts with becoming a surrealist masterpiece. Even when they’re having a lovey dovey musical number, they’ll splice in second-long shots of the hairy demon waggling his head and tongue and dancing around with galaxies spinning behind him and red and green lights flashing everywhere. And then they’ll show you a picture of a marmoset, and there will be some lightning, and that demon will wiggle his fingers and yell at you for a few minutes. The entire thing is pretty mind-blowingly awesome.’ Teleport City

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Wikipedia | IMDb | We are grateful to khayaal_e_yaar for some plot details.

 

 


Vaastu Shastra

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Vaastu Shastra is a 2004 Indian Hindi horror film produced by Ram Gopal Varma aka RGV (Raat; Kaun? Bhoot; Phoonk) and directed by Saurab Narang from a screenplay by Charu Du Acharya. The term vastu shastra (vāstu śāstra) refers to an ancient science of architecture for constructing and locating buildings to be in harmony with nature.

The film stars Susmita Sen and J.D. Chakravarty. It was released on 22nd October 2004, with largely positive reviews. Vaastu Shastra was dubbed into Telugu as Marri Chettu.

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Plot synopsis:

Jhilmil Rao (Sushmita Sen) and Virag Rao (J.D. Chakravarthy) buy a new house in the suburbs of Mumbai. There is a creepy-looking gnarly old tree outside the house.

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Jhilmil, a gynaecologist, works late just like her husband Virag — they’re hardly there for their little son.

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The problem comes when he starts making imaginary friends. At least that’s what Jhilmil and Virag think. But their son starts getting obsessed with his “friends”…

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Reviews:

“Sachin K. Krishn’s camerawork is eye-catching without being glamorous. The frames create a feverish flush of fear without overdoing the sleek exteriors of the bungalow where the horror unsheathes in glowing purple shades. While the first half gives us, and the characters, a chance to catch our breath, the second half pulls out all stops to unleash a furious terror across the plot’s sweltering scenario.” Subhash K Jha, Glamsham.com

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“This film suffers from some very predictable twists of the plot, but it still does have some punch here as a stylish and mildly creepy ghost story.” Mark R. Leeper, SFCrowsNest

Vaastu-Shastra-2004

Cast:

Sushmita Sen as Jhilmil Rao
J. D. Chakravarthi as Virag Rao
Ahsaas Channa as Rohan
Peeya Rai Chowdhary as Radhika
Rajpal Yadav as Mad Guy
Purab Kohli as Radhika’s boyfriend
Rasika Joshi as Rukma (Maid)
Sayaji Shinde as Inspector Bhupal Gorpade
Zakir Hussain as Dinesh Dubey (zombie)

Filming locations:

Saswad, Maharashtra, India
Pune, Maharashtra, India

Wikipedia | IMDb

Indian horror on Horrorpedia: 19201920: Evil Returns | Aatank | Aatma (2006) | Agyaat | Bandh Darwaza | Bach ke ZaraBees Saal Baad | Bhoot Returns | Cape Karma |Dahshat | Darling | Darwaza (1978) | Dracula 2012 | Ek Thi Daayan | Horror Story | Khooni Panja | Mallika | PhoonkPizza | Purana Mandir | Purani Haveli | Qatil Chudail | Ragini MMS | Tahkhana | Veerana (1988)


Ludo (2015)

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Ludo is a 2015 Bengali Indian horror film directed by Qaushiq Mukherjee and Nikon from a screenplay written by Mukherjee, based on a storyline they both devised.

Cast:

Kamalika Banerjee, Joyraj Bhattacharya, Soumendra Bhattacharya, Ananya Biswas, Ranodeep Bose, Murari Mukherjee, Rii, Subholina Sen, Tillotama Shome

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Reviews:

“It follows the classic slasher formula of kids trying to get laid, and instead ending up in pieces all over the place, but it does it in a way that deceptively sidesteps the audience’s expectations, and perhaps offers a bit of a bait and switch.” J Hurtado, Twitch

Ludo has things to say about India’s still-repressed culture, and its attempts at tying sex into the horror are noticeable even if they’re not all that understandable. One monster devours someone’s innards only to be seen in the next scene smoking a post-cannibalistic cigarette. It’s not very subtle, but it’s also not very conclusive.” Rob Hunter, Film School Rejects

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“There’s a lot of promise in Ludo that gradually dissolves when the horror elements kick in. By the end, after we’ve seen guts consumed and other hideous acts occur under the mall’s roof, I wasn’t sure what was trying to be said other than “look at how crazy this shit is!” There’s an edginess to their film trying to find balance with the message, but the two never cohesively mesh.” Patrick Cooper, Bloody Disgusting

Trailer:

IMDb


The Other Side of the Door

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‘It was never meant to be opened.’

The Other Side of the Door is a 2016 British-Indian supernatural horror film directed by Johannes Roberts (Sanitarium; Forest of the Damned; F) from a screenplay co-written with Ernest Riera.

In the US, the film is released by 20th Century Fox on March 11, 2016.

Cast:

Javier Botet, Sarah Wayne Callies, Jeremy Sisto, Sofia Rosinsky, Suchitra Pillai-Malik, Logan Creran, Jax Malcolm.

Other-Side-of-the-Door-1

Plot:

A family lives an idyllic existence in India until a tragic accident takes the life of their young son. Inconsolable mother Maria (Sarah Wayne Callies of The Walking Dead) learns of an ancient Indian ritual that will bring him back to say a final goodbye. She travels to an ancient temple, where a door serves as a mysterious portal between two worlds. But when she disobeys a sacred warning to never open that door, she upsets the balance between life and death…

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Trailer:

IMDb


Mumbai 125 KM (2014)

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‘The road is not scary. It’s beyond scary’

Mumbai 125 KM – aka Mumbai 125 KM 3D – is a 2014 supernatural Indian Hindi horror film co-produced and directed by Hemant Madhukar from his own story. Dheeraj Rattan provided the dialogue. The film is shot on Stereoscopic 3D cameras and released in 2D and 3D formats.

Main cast:

Karanvir Bohra, Vedita Pratap Singh, Joey Debroy, Vije Bhatia and Veena Malik.

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Plot:

Aashika (Singh) wakes up hysterical in a hospital and goes into a flashback. A group of friends, Prem (Bohra), Jacks (Debroy), Diya (Bajpai) and Vivek (Bhatia) decided to travel to Mumbai to celebrate New Year’s Day.

Whilst travelling, a patrol cop halts the car and interrogates them on the account of suspicion of driving under the influence of alcohol, but Prem bribes him into letting them go. The same night they begin to encounter weird situations in the forest…

Reviews:

“From Vedita Pratap Singh’s atrocious acting to Karanvir Bohra’s idiotic spoilt brat act to Veena Malik’s flying ghost antics, Mumbai 125 KM gives you enough opportunities to point and laugh … The CGI is shabbily done and the stereoscopic 3D effect is hardly noticeable. You would wish even you could fly from theatres as Veena Malik’s ghost does in the film.” Bryan Durham, Daily News and Analysis India

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“The 3D, worthless as ever, isn’t post-converted for a change, with the use of stereoscopic cameras. This is a schoolboy error because the entire film is shot at night. The filmmakers try to overcompensate by lighting up every scene like the moon (you can literally see the source), thereby making this look like a grainy animated disaster.” Rahul Desai, Mumbai Mirror

“Somewhere in the middle of this unwittingly hilarious journey, as the characters foolishly stop the car innumerable times, trying to help out random, strange ghosts coming out of the jungle, you stop caring if any of them is left dead or alive. They seemed too stupid to be left alive anyway.” Shubha Shetty-Saha, Mid-Day.com

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Screen Shot 2016-02-18 at 21.48.28

 

Trailer 1:

Trailer 2:

Wikipedia | IMDb | Image thanks: The Imp Awards

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Miruthan (2016)

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Miruthan is a 2016 Indian Tamil science fiction zombie horror film written and directed by Shakti Soundar Rajan. It stars Jayam Ravi and Lakshmi Menon in the leading roles. Advertised as India’s first zombie film in Tamil, Miruthan was released on 19 February 2016.

Plot:

A stray dog becomes violent, after being exposed by toxic fumes, then bites a security guard. The security guard becomes a zombie momentarily and starts a chain of human infections via bites…

Karthik (Jayam Ravi) is a traffic officer in Ooty who avoids from any danger as he has to take care of a younger sister in her early teens. He is in love with a Dr. Renuka (Lakshmi Menon) but never proposes as all their meetings end up putting him in a bad light and to complicate things Renuka is already engaged to be married.

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As the zombie infection spreads throughout the city, Karthik and Renuka team up with a few others to move to the adjoining metro city to find a vaccine for the infection…

miruthan-first-zombie-film-20-1453266174-18-1455770008

Review:

“A few of the zombie portions work — the initial one involving a dog, the interval block when a hoard of zombies take over the van carrying the protagonists, and the climax, which has a superb set-up, at least on paper. Even though the execution is off, the haunting song that Imman provides for this moment, Mirutha Mirutha, hits us hard, and makes us care for the lead pair.” M. Sugganth, Times of India

“Where the film succeeds, I think, unexpectedly, is that it both exemplifies and transcends regional entertainment by telling a universally popular story that includes locally acceptable tropes without alienating potential outside audiences.” J Hurtado, Twitch

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“While the film has been marketed as a ‘zombie’ film, it fits nowhere into that definition except for the inclusion of zombie-like creatures. The storyline is not novel nor convincing. It is amateurish. It is just another Tamil film masquerading as a zombie film.” Latha Srinivasan, dna

Cast and characters:

Trailer:

Wikipedia | IMDb


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