4º – The Vanishing (George Sluizer, 1988)
After his girlfriend mysteriously disappears at a gas station without a trace, Rex finds himself completely obsessed with deciphering the mysteries of the events of the fateful day. Everything that governs this film is done by chance. Each unevenness of the plot disturbs the spectator to the detriment of the random form that the events follow.
Read More: 10 Perfect Romantic Movies for a Girls’ Night
3º – The Virgin Spring (Ingmar Bergman, 1960)
An innocent girl ends up falling into the hands of evil people, in a game of envy and, of course, out of simple chance. Here this figure of the random aspect of life follows two different strands, first approaching the final moments of the life of a brutally murdered young woman and, later, of how the murderers end up finding the young woman’s relatives. Powerful and sad, ‘The Virgin Spring’ is a film about how evil is something rooted in the synthesis of the human being.
Continued on Next Page