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A darkness swirls at the center of a world-renowned dance company, one that will engulf the troupe's artistic director (Tilda Swinton), an ambitious young dancer (Dakota Johnson), and a grieving psychotherapist (Lutz Ebersdorf). Some will succumb to the nightmare. Others will finally wake up. (MUBI)

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Reviews (8)

RUSSELL 

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English With the original Suspiria, it has practically nothing in common. It was enough to slightly revamp the premise with three mothers - which is equally alternative here - and change the setting to a dance school, and it could have been a self-sufficient film that didn't have to be wrapped in the cloak of a remake of a horror classic from the 70s. I was looking forward to a more artistic approach, but it never occurred to me that it would turn into a heartbreaking holocaust love story with witches. I appreciate only some individual moments and occasionally disturbing atmosphere of the new Suspiria - but it's all so inconsistent that even if something caught my interest, it was immediately shattered by something tedious or uninteresting. I don't like to criticize movies for their length, but there are so many unnecessary and meaningless scenes here, that the excessive running time is completely unforgivable. Unfortunately, Guadagnino doesn't really work with a gradual build-up of atmosphere and mystery - the school loses its air of mystery very quickly - and the film doesn't even have a proper storyline. In the end, it feels to me like an experimental feminist pretentiousness that exploited the good name of Suspiria for its own purposes. The taste in my mouth after this experience probably won't go away anytime soon, and I'm starting to regret that David Gordon Green, who was originally circling around the project before Guadagnino and Kajganich got it and created this travesty, didn't make the remake of Suspiria instead. ()

Othello 

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English The complete opposite of the current trend in horror. A film that doesn't formally distinguish the conscious from the subconscious, the voices sound either whispered or from a distance, the walls talk and the mirrors watch. A horror film that starts with dying and ends with reconciliation. More viewings will be needed to give me a bit of perspective and some unraveling. So on the one hand, the whisperiness and unchanging pace of Suspiria was often distracting, which may have been enough to hide the fact that the film isn't very well edited and Dakota Johnson is still an acting lump. However, the new Suspiria is a film that is more expressive and better the day after viewing than during. And that's one of the essential yet rare qualities of a horror film. ()

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kaylin 

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English Suspiria from Luca Guadagnino is a different film than Suspiria from Dario Argento. It is in fact a good film. Actually, I think it's a shame that the filmmakers tried to ride the coattails of the legendary film at all costs, because this new film deserves to stand on its own, to have its own story, not to be promoted as a remake. It's good enough to pull it off without this crutch, which kind of undermines the great legacy Argento has. ()

POMO 

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English Horror doesn’t really suit Guadagnino, who takes a sterile and theatrical approach to mystery. He’s a master when it comes to psychology, but that’s not what his Suspiria is about. So, why is it watchable, other than for the acting performances of famous faces? Because it spurs curiosity about what has emerged from this strange, cold form of cinema with its historical roots in 1970s Germany and because of its unconventional portrayal of a clan of witches. Thanks, among other things, to the poetic slow-motion shots like something out of a romantic retro music video by Marika Gombitová, however, it turns out bad beyond all expectations. The witches’ mother, who looks like Jabba the Hut in fashionable sunglasses, is ridiculous. ()

Filmmaniak 

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English Only a torso standing on its head remains from the original horror story about a student who reveals a dark conspiracy inside a dance school, unnecessarily supplemented by a second narrative line in which an 80-year-old German psychoanalyst investigates the disappearance of one of the dancers on his own and searches for his long-lost wife. The duality of the plot is also symbolized by the environment of Berlin divided into two parts in 1977 (when the original Suspiria was in cinemas), where the story was moved due to references to RAF terrorism and post-Nazi ideology. The result is confused and poorly edited video art, which permutes the motifs of the original film in its own way and thus differs significantly from the original, including its overall tone. The burnt out colored background of the school from Argent's version has been replaced by a boring gray, the visually impressive parts are just the sequences in which Guadagnino tries to shock the audience, and this time you won't even remember the music. The new Suspiria is a film about the awakening of femininity and female power, used to humiliate men and the fight for supremacy in a matriarchal community, in which the lead male character is played by a woman, and where dance equals sexual experience. However, the film is drowned in an unnecessarily stretched and slushy storytelling, in which gradually escalating tension and anxiety alternate with flashy and unconstructed brutality and straightforwardness, manifested in the fact that the film definitely does not try to hide who the dance school teachers really are and lays its cards on the table right from the beginning. ()

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