La Llorona (2019) FILM SUBTITLE INDONESIA STREAMING / DOWNLOAD
321 votes, average 6.4 out of 10
La Llorona (2019) – Accused of the genocide of Mayan people, retired general Enrique is trapped in his mansion by massive protests. Abandoned by his staff, the indignant old man and his family must face the devastating truth of his actions and the growing sense that a wrathful supernatural force is targeting them for his crimes. La Llorona (2019)
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LaLlorona ([La ʝoˈɾona]), also known as The Weeping Woman, is a 2019 Guatemalan horror film co-written, directed, co-produced, and co-edited by Jayro Bustamante.
Plot
Former Guatemalan dictator Enrique Monteverde (based on Efraín Ríos Montt) is convicted for orchestrating the native Mayans's genocide in 1982–83. Now elderly, he lives with his wife Carmen, daughter Natalia, granddaughter Sara and their security guard, Letona. During the trial, Natalia is troubled by indigenous women's accounts of being brutalized by Monteverde's army, while Carmen dismisses them as lies. The high court overturns the verdict, ruling his crime cannot be conclusively proven, causing the outraged public to hold nonstop protests outside Monteverde's home.
The sound of a woman weeping interrupts Monteverde's sleep and he narrowly misses shooting his wife. Subsequently, most of his household staff — who are ethnic Kaqchikel people — quit. His devoted housekeeper Valeriana brings in a young woman named Alma to work as a maid. Supernatural activity involving water ensues. One night, Monteverde sees Alma wading through the pool into the house. His family discovers him, sexually aroused, watching Alma wash her dress. Disgusted, Carmen tells Natalia that he was always attracted to native women and reveals her suspicions that Valeriana is his daughter. Later, Natalia learns that the young Alma had a son and daughter who died. Alma teaches Sara to hold her breath under water.
The protests continue, essentially trapping the family in the house. Carmen wets the bed during recurring nightmares where she is a Kaqchikel woman being abducted with two Kaqchikel children by the military. The house is blanketed with flyers of the disappeared from decades earlier; Sara and Alma notice one of the men on the flyers is among the protesters. Suspicion grows within Valeriana when she reveals to Alma that nobody in her village appears to know her.
Valeriana suspects dark magic is at work and attempts to cleanse Monteverde of the evil spirit. Later that night, Sara uses her grandfather’s oxygen cylinder to hold her breath longer under the pool. Terrified, Monteverde starts shooting Alma, accidentally hitting Sara's arm. The house is surrounded by the spirits of the disappeared. Searching around the house, Letona encounters the two Kaqchikel children's spirits who calmly take him away. Valeriana performs a Mayan ceremony while a woman's wailing can be heard. Carmen goes into a trance as she is transported back to the nightmare, which are revealed to be Alma's last moments, watching her children drowned by soldiers before being executed herself by Monteverde. A distraught Carmen strangles Monteverde in the trance and in reality.
At Monteverde's funeral, an old general excuses to the bathroom. He hears a woman's wail as the room begins to flood.
Cast
María Mercedes Coroy as Alma
Margarita Kenéfic as Carmen
Sabrina De La Hoz as Natalia
Julio Díaz as Enrique Monteverde
María Telón as Valeriana
Ayla-Elea Hurtado as Sara
Juan Pablo Olyslager as Letona
Release
LaLlorona had its world premiere on 30 August 2019 at the Venice Film Festival (Giornate degli Autori) and later screened in the Contemporary World Cinema section at the 2019 Toronto International Film Festival. It was selected as the Guatemalan entry for the Best International Feature Film at the 93rd Academy Awards, making the shortlist of 15 films. On 6 August 2020, the film premiered on the horror streaming service Shudder. On October 18, 2022, the film was released by the Criterion Collection on Blu-ray and DVD.
Reception
Critical reception for LaLlorona has been positive. On Rotten Tomatoes, the film holds a rating of 96%, based on 95 reviews, with an average rating of 8/10. The website's critical consensus reads "LaLlorona puts a fresh spin on the familiar legend by blending the supernatural and the political to resolutely chilling effect." On Metacritic the film holds a weighted average score of 79 out of 100 based on 14 critic reviews, indicating "generally favorable reviews".
LaLlorona received praise from Katie Rife from The A.V. Club, who felt that the film offered "a more intelligent spin on the legend than last year’s schlocky The Curse Of LaLlorona". She praised its direction, visual style and story which "layers elements of class, race, and gender conflict on top of creeping horror atmosphere", but criticized its pacing which "slows to a crawl, as Bustamante delves into inter-familial dynamics that are interesting but ultimately a distraction from a more satisfying tale of supernatural revenge."
Manohla Dargis from The New York Times described the film as "a thoughtful, low-key Guatemalan movie that deploys its genre shocks inside a sober art-house package". She noted that "its early scenes — with their mannered delivery and narrative ellipses — are right out of the modern art-film stylebook", reminding her of Lucrecia Martel's style. She added "With precise framing, compositional flair and a steady hand, Bustamante layers the story, adding daubs that suggest rather than explain."
Monica Castillo from RogerEbert.com awarded it 3 stars out of 4, stating that "LaLlorona is filled with bewitching imagery and tension, even if it’s less full of surprises and jump scares than other horror movies. Bustamante uses the old haunted tale not to scare us, but to force his audience to reflect on the ways they are complicit in oppression."
Meagan Navarro from Bloody Disgusting awarded it 2+1⁄2 skulls out of 5, writing "Bustamante delivers a sobering evocation for justice, and in the case of LaLlorona, it’s by the hands of a folkloric vengeance seeker. Certain aspects of the story are emotionally powerful, while other threads feel underdeveloped. The predictability of the overarching direction means the slow-burn pacing can drag, and the horror elements are very minimal. If you go in expecting something more historically relevant and genre adjacent, it’s easier to find an in to a narrative that's not always easily accessible."
= Accolades
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See also
2019 Toronto International Film Festival
List of submissions to the 93rd Academy Awards for Best International Feature Film
List of Guatemalan submissions for the Academy Award for Best International Feature Film