La tía Alejandra

La tía Alejandra
Directed by Arturo Ripstein
Produced by Lucero Isaac
Written by Delfina Careaga
Sabina Berman
Starring Isabela Corona
Music by Luis Hernández Bretón
Cinematography José Ortíz Ramos
Edited by Rafael Ceballos
Distributed by Estudios Churubusco
Release date
  • 1979 (1979)
Running time
98 minutes
Country Mexico
Language Spanish

La Tía Alejandra (Aunt Alejandra) is a Mexican horror film of 1979, starring Isabela Corona.

Plot

The plot is based on the arrival of Aunt Alejandra to a familiar household consisting of two parents and three children. A woman who is loving, in principle, suffers severe mood swings and strange things happen in her room quite regularly and that seems to be surrounded by an aura of mystery. Rejected by the eldest child, she only serves to bring misfortune to them since coming home. Auntie has a fortune that will surely help her relatives, but really begins to destroy the whole family with diabolical acts, and attempts to teach children witchcraft. When one of the children mocks her, she caused his death. When her nephew dismisses of his house, she chokes him in his own bed. When the older girl burns her face, Alejandra burns an entire room with the girl inside. Only surviving Lucía, the wife, and her young daughter, but she seems to have learned the secrets of Alejandra...[1]

Cast

Comments

La Tía Alejandra is a curious and unusual, a rarity in the genre of Mexican Cinema. Not strictly a horror film, but conveys concern in many of its passages. It is not explicit in what it shows but rightly fiddles with witchcraft, curses, black Magic and Satanism. Not when graphic violence on screen display, but in a subtle way the sample with an elegant ferocity that causes discomfort even viewer. The staging of Ripstein is austere. But his control over the narrative tempo is excellent. With the atmosphere and the magnetic presence of a large Isabela Corona that from a physical get feeble and helpless to convey a menacing tone that seems unfeasible but for the good work between director and actress. [2]

References

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