Luciferina (2018)

  • Year: 2018
  • Released: 04 Oct 2018
  • Country: Argentina
  • Adwords: 2 wins & 1 nomination
  • IMDb: https://www.imdb.com/title/tt8072078/
  • Rotten Tomatoes: https://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/luciferina
  • Metacritics:
  • Available in: 720p, 1080p,
  • Language: Spanish
  • MPA Rating: N/A
  • Genre: Horror, Mystery
  • Runtime: 111 min
  • Writer: Gonzalo Calzada
  • Director: Gonzalo Calzada
  • Cast: Sofía Del Tuffo, Marta Lubos, Pedro Merlo
  • Keywords: drug abuse, demonic possession, sister sister relationship, exorcism, satanism,
4.7/10
83% – Critics
20% – Audience

Luciferina Photos

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Luciferina Movie Reviews

Argentina nun horror fun

If you’ve been reading my writing for awhile, you may know that I’ve learned some rules from horror movies that have aided in my survival for the last forty some odd years. For example, I don’t do drugs or have sex in the woods. And I avoid old Hollywood actors and actresses. Now, thanks to Luciferina, I’ve added a new one: don’t drink Ayahuasca in a haunted church.

Natalia is a 19-year-old novice nun — who has never been baptized — who must return home when her mother dies and her father is in a coma. Her sister Angela blames her for leaving the family behind and claims that evil forces have been attacking the home. That makes sense — her father claims that their mother repeatedly cut herself, painted a series of uterus heavy imagery and then attacked him.

Angela has fallen in with a bad crowd while at university, as she’s constantly high and dealing with her abusive boyfriend Mauro. As time goes on, however, we learn that Natalia may not be the pure innocent that she appears to be — she’s at war with the desires in her body as she tries to keep her spiritual marriage pure with God.

Natalia decides to join her sister’s friends as they partake in an Ayahuasca ritual, which often means vomiting or defecating repeatedly on the road to enlightenment before visions take hold. These visions don’t erase the dark parts of the soul, as promised. Instead, they cause murder, self-mutilation, revelations about the girls’ parents and set Natalia up for a one-on-one confrontation with Satan in the human form of Abel, a boy who has had mental illness issues his entire life.

Writer/director Gonzalo Calzada also created the film Resurrection, which was the most successful horror movie in the history of Argentina. This is the first of his “The Trinity of the Virgins,” films that will be centered around virgin girls batting demons. His imagery is dreamlike and its intriguing to see a non-Italian or American take on demonic possession.

Luciferina makes the narrative leap from possession film to slasher to arthouse freakout by the end of its running time. There’s a pretty sinister image of Abel sitting with all of the bodies of his victims stacked up on the altar that leads into the final confrontation. Natalia attempts to protect herself with both a pentagram and a gun before learning that she can use her light to destroy the evil that is inside her former love interest.

Calzada has the makings of being a great director. I would have cut this one down by around a half an hour, but I also have no attention span. That said, the last fifteen minutes of this film, where Natalia embraces her womanhood and sexually exorcizes the demons inside Abel, is on the level of bonkers The Exorcist clones like Enter the Devil and The Return of the Exorcist. This is also a film that echoes the Psycho shower scene with its heroine feeling herself until three gigantic cockroaches appear, frightening her back into being chaste.

If you like supernatural Horror and hallucinogenic drugs.

It is about a girl who can see auras. She is in bad terms with her father and sister. Nevertheless, she goes with the latter and a bunch of her sister’s friends to a secluded abandoned orphanage in a island to take ayahuasca-an hallucinogen drug. As expected, things start to become weird after they take the drug-thing that takes a lot.

At the beginning it does not look right although from the introduction of the second part, the end of the character’s presentation, gets better. But in the end it is too long and sinks like a rock at sea.

I had little to none interest in seeing the end so I fast-forwarded from more or less and hour and so. Nothing interesting so I am rating it with a three and a half rounding up-as usual-to a four.

My Review Of “Luciferina”

The story is a complicated, layered character study folded in a supernatural, demonic nightmare. At times the movie stumbles through continuity with the many micro-plotlines bridging toward a climactic end. However it maintains enough controlled focus to allow the overall story arc to hold together. It’s steady pace creates a slow-burn suspense.

The cinematography is a delicious blend of neo-Gothic settings and devilishly creepy occult imagery. Calzada focuses his energy on taking these characters and the audience through a cavalcade of haunting, eerie locations that create an epic and entertaining atmosphere. The practical and CGI effects are equally superb and the camera isn’t shy about showing the visceral horrors.

Overall “Luciferina” is well worth watching, and for fans of occult horror it packs a punch. It blends Catholic concepts of evil with tribal mysticism and pagan mythology. It also creates one heck of a demonic horror show complete with a sexorcism that is totally metal.