RESTLESS SPIRITS: A New Wave of Horror cinema from Central Asia.

Central Asian Scary Movies have arrived.

 I have been treated to a number of quite ambitious chillers and thrillers from young directors from Central Asia these over the past few years (screened with Russian subtitles) in the cinemas of Kazakhstan.

Dastur from Kazakhstan in 2023 brought demonic possession to the heart of Central Asian life. Qumalag, also from Kazakhstan a year later had a teenage girl preyed on by a dark force emanating from the internet. Then, from Kyrgyzstan we had Zhyrkysh (Hunter) in 2024. This featured a policeman and hunter joining forces to find an unknown thing menacing a small village. That same year Ifrit, also from Kyrgyzstan explored the classic girl captured by a satanic entity formula.

It’s time to examine some that have illuminated local cinema screens over the past six months.

Domestic disturbance.

Anel is a domestic supernatural/psychological thriller from Kazakhstan produced by Tiger Films. Released in December last year, it was directed by Akan Satayev who is also known for Racketeer crime drama franchise that began in 2007.

[IMDB.com]

The action revolves around a present-day Kazakh household. The setting constitutes the kind of pseudo-Georgian home that many a wealthy Kazakh lives in on the outskirts of Almaty.

We open on the titular Anel’s 12th birthday (played by Madina Medikyzy). The celebration, lead by her mother Laura (Zarina Karmen) is disrupted when Anel complains of being unwell and has to be excused. That is the beginning of a series of disturbing acts: she throws a bizarre tantrum at school, taunts her housekeeper for being single, and is discovered stuffing herself with raw meat in the kitchen in her sleep. Laura expresses growing concern about her daughter in the face of apparent indifference from her husband and mother-in-law. Nevertheless, they call in a psychiatrist who seems to be impressed by Anel.

However, Laura comes to suspect that her mother-in-law, the composed elder of the family, could well be hiding a sinister secret and have some connection with the events….

A psychological thriller based around parental anxieties [Yandex]

The plot seems to parallel Ifrit, yet we are then confounded with a revelation (one for which, I for one, did not see coming) which obliges the viewer to re-evaluate all that has gone before.

Anel is a housebound film with most of the events occurring in the domestic interior. The sight of quivering tree branches as seen in silhouette through a curtained window sets many scenes. The pace is measured and somber, with cello music a part of the score. The putative horror paraphernalia is sheer Dennis Wheatley, with dolls with pins in them, a black goat and even a large red-eyed Satanic figure.

In contrast to Dastur, Anel does not invoke religious concepts and the only issue that it raises is that of alcohol abuse.

The film was shown in the City Mall cinema in Karaganda on Kazakhstan’s Independence Day. We all stood to attention as the national anthem played before the screening. Perhaps, buoyed up by this, some of the audience clapped as the final credits rolled up, which is not something I have encountered before.

Spirit on a mission.

Kyzil KoilekGirl in a Red Dress – released this April was directed by Belek Turgunov (also known for Ataman, 2023). A spectral chiller from Kyrgyzstan, it was filmed on location on the majestic shores of Issyk-Kul in the western Tan Shien mountains.

[Practicuma Online]

The plot outline is all too familiar: a young couple buys a new property in a rural environment and is faced with spooky goings on there.

What makes Girl in a Red Dress distinctive, though, is the setting. The property consists of a disused café which they intend to do up and re-open. (There are countless such stopping off places in Central Asia offering shashlik and goulashes).

The locals are less than welcoming. One of them is caught gazing at them in a lugubrious way but fails to engage with them. The couple take food to a neighbor and, finding the door open, discover the inhabitant to be hiding from them. We learn of a local legend concerning a woman in a blood-soaked dress materializing on the roads and sometimes chasing drivers.

Ignorant of this, Kairat and his wife Asulu and their son Amin set about renovating the old café. They have erected a yurt (a circular tent) just outside the café and this becomes where they live.

It is the child, Amin who first scares his parents. He begins talking to people who are not there and wandering off. Then a painting daubed on the wall of a girl in a red dress re-appears after being painted over and a dancing cactus toy calls out the boy’s name and so on.

We have here a belt-and -braces ghost story of the kind where a vengeful spirit – which turns out to be the ghost of a girl who was gang raped by locals and then killed -is laid to rest. It is the family who will be the eventual redeemers.

Contemporary realism counts as the saving grace of this film with its spartan setting being as fresh as the plotline is as old as the hills.

The monster (and `monster it is, at first) seems almost camp. After brief glimpses of her in jump scares, she wrestles Asulu to the ground and is revealed as a pantomime witch.

Overdone monster? Movie poster for Kyzil Koinok

The cinema was quite packed when I caught Girl in a Red Dress in early April. Some of the audience seemed a little unprepared for it. A young woman sat to the left of me spent the whole screening ducking down and playing on her phone in an effort not to see what was happening while, behind me, a group of three people left the showing altogether.

The reckoning.

I can hardly imagine how these people would have reacted to Osh (Revenge). This lurid melodrama from Kyrgystan is the work of Ilgis Kuvatback who is also known as the writer of Zombety – a zombie apocalypse T.V serial from five years back.

[Marie-Claire.KZ]

Osh takes place in a nondescript Kyrgyz village, the kind without internet access. Zhyldyz (Suyun Orolbek making her screen debut) is a local good-natured young woman just married to a policeman from the area. (Imash Azhyul who appeared in Flashback the same year).

One evening Zhyldyz is waylaid by a pack of four vodka-sodden ne’er- do-wells who have had their eye on this village beauty. When one of them grabs her and she defends herself, she is knocked out. She comes around in a dacha of one of the men. It is there that she is subject to sexual abuse from all four of them (one of whom is played by Kuralbek Chokoev who is better known as a singer!)

The men stage an alibi by pouring vodka into the poor girl’s mouth. Indeed, her conventional husband later believes her to have been intoxicated and consenting and visits yet more physical violence on her.

Somewhat later on, Zhyldyz is walking alone in a wooded area of an evening and once again one of the miscreants seizes her looking for a repeat performance. No longer outnumbered, Zhyldyz delivers the blow of a rock to his skull. The man whimpers on the ground, blood oozing from his head. The worm has turned and the woman finds herself relishing the damage she has inflicted.

From that point on we witness a sweet village girl metamorphose into into female rage made flesh as she begins to pick out her tormentors one by one. Even the arrival of two police personnel from the nearest town cannot defeat her. One of the men’s heads is discovered by her mother in a cooking pot. (As with the Voroshilov Shooter from 1999, the viewers sympathies side with the wronged party yet we then seem to be invited to cheer on sadistic and disproportionate acts of retribution).

Suyun Orolbek made her first screen appearance in this film [Marie Claire.KZ]

The drawn-out rape sequence is not titillating and overall graphic depictions are eschewed, yet this can be called a horror film. It is even a little reminiscent of Fatal Attraction (1987) in that the `monster` of the show is an ordinary mortal woman. Indeed, in Osh candles are seen to extinguish before she makes an appearance. The film is not all sensationalism, however: there is much judicious use of music here, most of it Kyrgyz rock and pop but Camille Saint- Saenz’s Dans Macabre provides a soundtrack in one scene.

Following on from Sisters (Russia, 2022), Osh has pretentions to being a film which raises weighty issues. Statistics]  concerning violence against women (as with Sisters) are flashed up on the screen just before the credits roll.

As much as it was refreshing to see a Central Asian film in which the Family does not constitute the saviour of all, I left the cinema feeling rather shellshocked. The most striking ingredient of this film must be that it is unsentimental to a fault.

What stands out about this new wave of Central Asian horror is that it – not being flashy, funny or salacious – is not courting the youth market. Maybe it is this which allows it to raise questions that other film genres dare not.

Lead image: Still from Anel – Kursiv.KZ

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 [EC1]

 [EC2]

WINTER CHILLS: Three Ruskinoir thrillers.

Get closer to the fire and let me tell you about – He Who Turns Out the Light,Zamyachni and The Highway.

The winters here in Kazakhstan can be as cruel as the ones that I left behind in Russia. A windy day with minus thirty is no laughing matter nor are the ice-rink pavements, the early darkness nor the fact that you suffer from constant low-level flu.

To make it through this I turn to dark tales. Russian crime thrillers, courtesy of pirated DVDs found at the local open-air markets, are just what the doctor ordered.

Under the influence of Nordic Noir, a fresh `drama detective` subgenre has emerged in Russian TV and film in the 2000s. These show elements of psychological thrillers and are Horror adjacent with it.

Here follow three examples of what I mean:

From 2008 He Who Turns Out the Light (Tot Kto on Gasit Svet) constitutes an 86-minute-long cinema debut by the director Andrei Libenson (also known for the science-fantasy extravaganza Coma from 2012 as well as Zamyachni).

Based on a story called Dark Water by Oleg Osipov, this Non -Stop production features some hefty names in screen acting. These include the matinee idol Alexander Guskov in the lead role and Ekaterina Vilkova (no stranger to this genre, having been in Cold Shores and Detektor). The score is the work of the busy Lugansk born composer Yuri Potenko (First Time (2017), Inhabited Island (2008), to name but some.

In St Petersburg, goes the story, a killer is at large. He slays a young girl every Wednesday. The action opens on the second month of the investigation. The murders continue. Pyotr Moiseyev (Guskov) – the chief investigator is feeling the strain.

Alexey Guskov [Kinoteatr.ru]

Then a suspect is detained. He appears to confess. Moiseyev has his doubts as to whether they have the right man but the beleaguered constabulary tell the press that they have triumphed. Following a tip, Moiseyev finds himself on a train to Svetogorsk. (This is a real town in the Kaliningrad region, although the film was not shot there). He discovers that the locale is overseen by a rogue local police chief who stymies him at every turn. Things lead to an action-packed finale where the surprise face of the real killer is unmasked….

A confession isn’t proof [dzen.ru]

The crepuscular look of everything. The dwelling on the corruption in high places. Guskov’s hardboiled lone wolf detective. Vilkova’s femme fatale – all screams `Noir`.  This is represents a more American style Noir though and would look a little dated 15 years later. Nevertheless, He Who Turns Out the Lights is a bit of a lost classic that was more appreciated in select screenings abroad than it was in Russian cinemas.

Fear is the sovereign the tagline to He Who Turns Out the Lights. [Kartina2 T.V]

Zamyachni – the title of the next thriller – had me running for the dictionary, but in fact it bears the name of the fictional village where much of the action occurs. Also directed by Andrei Liberman it constitutes an 8 series television drama broadcast in 2023 (after languishing in a vault for four years after production). This also began life as a novel, this time by Ilya Bushin.

The 35-year-old Minsk born Tatiana Cherdyntseva – better known for appearing in T.V melodramas with titles like The Unloved Daughter-in Law (2023) -shares the lead role with forty-year-old Muscovite Alexei Bordukov (Mosga 2, 2021). (It is refreshing, by the way, to find a story where a hero and heroine share the main role).

[Dzen.ru]

The charming miscreant this time is a serial killer with a fondness for gouging the eyes out of his young female victims. He has struck again in 2001 (when most of the drama is set) but began his deeds in 1990 – a time to which we get repeated flashbacks.

{Dzen.Ru}

The two police Investigators meet up again in the process of enquiring into the matter. They share a tragic fate: he lost his fiancé to the killer, she her sister (both being one and the same). He is on an obsessive quest for vengeance. She, meanwhile, seems locked in a complex relationship with her mother and experiences blackouts.

Zamyachni itself forms a large part of the story having become a retreat for criminal elements. When the police roll up, on the trail of the killer, the locals hurl stones at them. (The title of Bushman’s novel is `No Man’s Land`). The proceedings, rather than dwell on gruesome details, lean into eeriness. Evgeny Federov’s score does much to enhance this as do the emotional performances of the cast.  Cherdyntseva in particular conveys a sense of herself as being haunted. Most powerful of all though are the expressionistic use of lighting and sets.


A man and a woman both function as the heroes. [Dzen.ru]

Plot wise, however, Zamyachnicommits one cardinal howler. The culprit jumps out of nowhere at the end, without having been a suspect or even seen earlier.

In Trassa (`The Highway`), a 10 episode `psychological detective thriller` from 2024. It leads us even deeper into the underworld. The man behind the cameras this time is Dusan Gligorov who had already excelled in this genre with the TV serial `Krystalni` from four years ago. The scribe – who has his name on such cinema blockbusters as Invasion (2019) and Sputnik (2020) – is 54-year-old Oleg Maluvichko.

Karina Razumovskaya, a 41-yeatr old St Petersburgian who made her name in the TV series Major (2014 -2022) -gets the difficult task of portraying a troubled and sometimes unsympathetic protagonist. She plays alongside the 50-year-old Anna Nikitichna as a doughtier police investigator.

The story begins with a teenage girl in a rural area being saved from suicide after having shot both her parent’s dead. Meanwhile a female judge finds that her adopted daughter has absconded in order to search for her real mum and dad – but then leaves a terrifying voice message pleading for help…The two events prove to be intertwined…

A promotional poster for Trassa/ The Highway. [RuTube.ru]

The criminal aspect this time is a shadowy but many tentacled fraternity that has systematized the kidnapping and sexual exploitation of young girls. Their stomping ground is the town of Mineralni Vody through which the titular highway runs.

Truly dark stuff [7 Days.ru]

It is in this series that one of the most harrowing sequences that I have yet seen on either film or television occurs (in brief, it involves the date rape and abduction of a teenage girl).

For all its lush locations (it is set in the South Caucuses) Trassa is bleak to a fault. Some online commentators claimed to discern an anti-male agenda at work in the drama. For sure, if there are any heroes here then they are women and none of the men can really, it seems, be trusted. The female characters, however, are also caught up in the same seediness and exhibit some moral ambiguity.

Anna Nikitichna (foreground) and Karina Razumovskaya. [RuTube.ru]

These shows underscore what Cold Shores has already demonstrated: the Russians can create noir dramas equal to those which come out of Scandinavia.

All three shows venture beyond the standardised Moscow/St Petersburg/Nizhnynovgorod parameters common to Russian film and television. More than that, they hold up a mirror to the complex and murky underbelly of contemporary Russian society. This is quite at odds with the family-values-decency view of Russian life being promulgated by the Putin regime’s soft power.