9º – The Seventh Continent (Michael Haneke, 1989)We will follow the normal day-to-day life of a European family consisting of a couple and their young daughter. The film gains its substance by bringing the empty compendium to which the family is inserted, with increasingly dull and dull routines, leading them to plan an extreme act. One of the most intelligent and forceful films in speaking of the destructive arc of a contemporary, contemporary society, ‘The Seventh Continent’ is a journey without a return to the human core in the world. The scariest thing that is explicit in each scene is that the film never ponders possible solutions to what we are seeing, quite the contrary, it only raises frightening prospects. Watch prepared for this masterpiece by the Austrian Michael Haneke, because you will never face life in the same way after its exhibition.
8º – The Vanishing (George Sluizer, 1988)After his girlfriend inexplicably disappears from a gas station, a man finds himself completely obsessed with finding out what had happened to his lifemate. Suspense sad and based on the development of life to frighten the viewer, ‘The Vanishing’ is a terrifying work on the strangest human motivations and the impossibility that we have to overcome certain facts of our history.
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