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1996, Mystery & thriller/Horror, 2h 5m

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Thesis   photos.

A Spanish film student (Ana Torrent) finds a videotape showing the torture and murder of a missing coed.

Genre: Mystery & thriller, Horror

Original Language: Spanish (Spain)

Director: Alejandro Amenábar

Producer: José Luis Cuerda

Writer: Alejandro Amenábar

Release Date (Streaming): Nov 20, 2016

Runtime: 2h 5m

Production Co: Las Producciones del Escorpión S.L., Sogepaq

Sound Mix: Dolby

Cast & Crew

Ana Torrent

Fele Martínez

Eduardo Noriega

Rosa Campillo

Miguel Picazo

Javier Elorriaga

Nieves Herranz

Olga Margallo

Alejandro Amenábar

José Luis Cuerda

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Horror News | HNN Official Site | Horror Movies,Trailers, Reviews

Film review: tesis (1996).

Phil Russell 07/10/2020 Extreme Cinema , Film Reviews

thesis 1996 review

Angela (Ana Torrent), is a grad student writing her thesis on violent video. She gets in contact with Chema (Fele Martinez), a long haired horror geek who takes her home and introduces her to his collection of gore tapes. He plays her a mondo movie calle ‘Fresh Blood’, which shows a dead body having its brain removed. Angela’s professor has access to the university’s private video library, and he promises to have a look through the archives to locate the most gruesome and p*rnographic films to help her in her studies. After browsing the shelves in the enormous deserted library, he plays one of the videos in a closed-off screening room… Angela later finds him dead in his seat, presumably of a chronic asthma attack. But what on earth was he watching that could cause him to keel over like that? Angela removes the tape from the machine and watches it at home. She’s hesitant at first, making sure she plays it with the contrast level turned down to a minimum so that she doesn’t have to see what’s happening on screen; but the sounds of a woman’s tortured cries are enough to convince her that the contents of the tape are far from pretty, and could in fact be a genuine snuff film. She shows the tape to her horror geek buddy, Chema, and he confirms it is real. The tape depicts a young woman tied to a chair being beaten and butchered with a circular saw by a man wearing a balaclava. Chema recognises the victim as a girl who disappeared from the campus two years previously. This odd couple then take it upon themselves to investigate…

Directed by Alejandro Amenabar Starring: Ana Torrent, Fele Martinez Original title: Tesis

After this superb initial set-up, the film descends into a silly thriller in which the sleuths are followed by the murderers who made the tape. And with only two possible culprits at hand, the film flits between the suspects, back and forth, and ruins any chances of having a surprise ending. As a whole, Tesis is not really gritty or graphic enough for my liking. It’s way too clean-cut and streamlined to truly disturb its audience. It serves as really nothing more than a calling card for director Amenabar, who predictably went on to such mainstream tosh as the Turn of The Screw rip-off, The Others, and the Penelope Cruz vehicle, Open Your Eyes. And like those later films, Thesis has a distinctive ‘play-it-safe’ vibe about it, as though the filmmakers were trying to secure an international hit at any cost, and were absolutely dead-set against including anything in the film that may have ruined its chances of sending the director on to a career in Hollywood. The snuff thriller was done much better – and more plausibly – in Anthony Waller’s superb Mute Witness (1994), and just like Amenabar, Waller also went on to a career in Hollywood, and delivered the lacklustre sequel, An American Werewolf In Paris, of which the less spoken about the better.

thesis 1996 review

Angela’s character is a bit wishy-washy; she’s supposed to be writing a thesis on video violence, but acts as though she’s never seen a horror movie in her life. She has a sort of doe-eyed innocence about her, more suited to watching Disney movies than fictional mondo vids like ‘Fresh Blood’. If she ever saw Men Behind The Sun or Snuff 102 she’d shit her own guts out. Chema is better as a character, the horror geek whose jaded sensibilities allows him to identify the poor butchered girl, meaning he can watch the tape over and over like a detached criminologist, as a way of piecing together the clues needed to track down the culprits. But even he is annoyingly obnoxious at times. His abnormal facial hair is annoying too; like a piece of shredded wheat pathetically trying to mimic Fidel Castro. And with his grungy plaid shirt and long hair and glasses, he looks like fellow horror geek, Mark Borchardt, from the excellent documentary American Movie: The Making of North Western, which incidentally, was made around the same time as Thesis .

thesis 1996 review

The film’s plus points are quite subtle; the first half hour or so has a gripping build-up, but soon fizzles out. There is also an underlying theme present concerning the scoptophiliac nature of moviegoers and of human nature in general: The opening scene sees Angela arriving at the station on a train. The conductor announces that a man has committed suicide by throwing himself in front of the train, and urges passengers not to look at the track as they leave. While she walks on the platform, Angela seems troubled; she doesn’t want to look at the dead body on the track, but at the same time she can’t help herself – the desire to look and feast her eyes on the tragedy is too great for her… Later on, there’s the scene where Chema watches the tape at his apartment – While Chema stares unflinchingly at the screen in an almost clinically detached manner, Angela stands at the back of the room with her hands covering her eyes. But while she’s doing this, she can’t help but take a horrified peek through the gaps of her fingers. By standing as far away from the screen as possible, she hopes to distance herself, both physically and emotionally, from the shocking imagery, but of course this doesn’t work, and those images are burned into her memory forever. An idea many horror fans will be able to relate to.

Tesis (1996)

Tags Alejandro Amenábar Ana Torrent Eduardo Noriega Fele Martínez Halálos tézis Miguel Picazo mute witness open your eyes snuff thriller spanish giallo spanish horror Tesis The Others Thesis Xabier Elorriaga

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  • Cast & crew
  • User reviews

Alejandro Amenábar, Fele Martínez, Eduardo Noriega, and Ana Torrent in Thesis (1996)

While doing a thesis about violence, Ángela finds a snuff video where a girl is tortured until death. Soon she discovers that the girl was a former student in her faculty... While doing a thesis about violence, Ángela finds a snuff video where a girl is tortured until death. Soon she discovers that the girl was a former student in her faculty... While doing a thesis about violence, Ángela finds a snuff video where a girl is tortured until death. Soon she discovers that the girl was a former student in her faculty...

  • Alejandro Amenábar
  • Ana Torrent
  • Fele Martínez
  • Eduardo Noriega
  • 134 User reviews
  • 59 Critic reviews
  • 15 wins & 6 nominations

Tráiler [VO]

  • Bosco Herranz

Xabier Elorriaga

  • Padre Angela
  • (as Francisco Hernández)
  • Madre Angela
  • Presentadora T.V.
  • Conserje Videoteca
  • Encargado tren
  • Encargada C. Ventas

José Luis Cuerda

  • Profesor 1º
  • Profesor 2º
  • Vigilante Tren
  • All cast & crew
  • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

More like this

Open Your Eyes

Did you know

  • Trivia When Angela ( Ana Torrent ) is accessing the warranty database, director Alejandro Amenábar 's name appears as a warranted customer of an XT-500 video camera.
  • Goofs When Professor Figueroa finds the door to the secret library, before he enters, he wears glasses. In he next shot, as he enters the door, the glasses are gone, but they come back some shots after.

Bosco : What color are my eyes?

  • Connections Featured in Cómo se hizo 'Tesis' (1996)
  • Soundtracks Máquinas en Celo Written by Ingresó Cadáver Performed by Ingresó Cadáver

User reviews 134

  • Dec 5, 2000
  • How long is Thesis? Powered by Alexa
  • What are the differences between the Korean DVD Version and the Original Version?
  • November 20, 2016 (United States)
  • Official site
  • Ám Ảnh Bạo Lực
  • Facultad de Ciencias de la Información, Madrid, Madrid, Spain
  • Las Producciones del Escorpión
  • See more company credits at IMDbPro
  • €721,214 (estimated)

Technical specs

  • Runtime 2 hours 5 minutes

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Thesis (1996) Movie Review

Last updated on September 18th, 2023 by Mighil

Thesis (1996) Movie Review | Rating 3.5/5

I still clearly remember the first time I watched Alejandro Amenabar’s 1996 thriller Thesis over a decade ago. As a young film buff in my early 20s, I always sought lesser-known films to expand my cinematic horizons beyond the typical Hollywood blockbusters. A friend recommended the Thesis to me, praising its clever story and ability to keep viewers guessing until the end.

Since then, Thesis has stayed with me as one of those boundary-pushing films that doesn’t shy away from exploring morally gray areas and asking difficult questions.

While revisiting it recently, I was struck by how well it has held up and how ahead of its time it seemed in some respects. Though not a perfect film, Thesis proved to be a thought-provoking and suspenseful 2.5-hour experience that has earned its place in my film canon.

The story follows Angela, a film student writing her Thesis on violence in the media. In her research, she comes across an unidentified snuff film depicting the real murder and torture of a young woman. Her investigation into the disturbing footage pulls her down a dark rabbit hole, putting her own life in danger.

thesis 1996 review

Director Amenabar sets an instantly unsettling tone with the film’s opening scene, where onlookers gather grimly around a suicide victim on train tracks but can’t look away from the gruesome sight.

From there, he masterfully builds an intense psychological thriller that keeps the viewer guessing what’s real and what’s not. The young cast, led by a believable turn from Ana Torrent as Angela, helps ground the story in realism. They sell the characters’ curiosity, fear, and moral dilemma around exposing themselves to such extreme violence on screen. The gloomy Madrid settings also aid in cultivating an ominous atmosphere throughout.

The film truly succeeds in its willingness to intelligently take on difficult questions about violence, consent, and human nature rather than offering easy answers. Amenabar doesn’t stop depicting human curiosity’s visceral, dark side, showing how even well-adjusted people can be drawn to the taboo and forbidden. Characters acknowledge that watching violence, even non-consensually, could make one complicit in some way.

At the same time, he doesn’t condemn viewership as a sign of sickness either. The complex themes gave me much to think about regarding society’s fraught relationship with representing violence and death on screen. I appreciate that the film invited discussion rather than preaching. We must acknowledge humans as flawed beings capable of good and evil rather than reducing them to one-dimensional stereotypes.

thesis 1996 review

While the final confrontation wraps up a bit too neatly for my tastes, I didn’t feel the ending undermined the thought-provoking nature of the film up to that point. On revisit, I noticed clever foreshadowing and connections between characters I had missed the first time. The mystery element remains compelling thanks to Amenabar’s skillful misdirection.

Of course, no film is perfect, and Thesis has flaws. The slow pace may test viewer patience at some points. Certain character actions also don’t always hold up to scrutiny. However, these minor gripes didn’t stop me from enjoying the atmospheric journey or engaging with the cerebral themes at the story’s core.

Ultimately, I can see why Thesis has garnered a cult following among genre fans and remains a seminal work from Amenabar. It proves that scary movies don’t need buckets of gore or explosions to unnerve – sometimes, a thought-provoking psychological approach can be much more disturbing.

While not redefining cinema, the Thesis is a gritty example of how the medium can start important conversations if filmmakers push creative boundaries. It’s a film I keep returning to every few years, and I always find new things to appreciate.

Movie Rating: 3.5/5 Note: 3 is the median. Anything above 3 is a recommended watch.

Written by Mighil — Mighil is an indie musician and tinkerer with diverse work experience in technology and writing. He has had the privilege of serving in various capacities, encompassing generalist and specialist roles. He is currently based in Chengdu.

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Thesis

Where to watch

1996 ‘Tesis’ Directed by Alejandro Amenábar

My name is Angela. They're going to kill me.

While doing a thesis about violence, Ángela finds a snuff video where a girl is tortured until death. Soon she discovers that the girl was a former student in her faculty...

Ana Torrent Fele Martínez Eduardo Noriega Xabier Elorriaga Miguel Picazo Nieves Herranz Rosa Campillo Paco Hernández Rosa Ávila Teresa Castanedo José Miguel Caballero Joserra Cadiñanos Julio Vélez Pilar Ortega Olga Margallo José Luis Cuerda Emiliano Otegui Walter Prieto Florentino Sainz Helena Castañeda

Director Director

Alejandro Amenábar

Assistant Director Asst. Director

Producers producers.

Alejandro Amenábar José Luis Cuerda Hans Burmann María Elena Sáinz de Rozas Wolfgang Burmann Julio Madurga Ricardo Steinberg

Executive Producers Exec. Producers

José Luis Cuerda Emiliano Otegui

Writers Writers

Alejandro Amenábar Mateo Gil

Editor Editor

María Elena Sáinz de Rozas

Cinematography Cinematography

Hans Burmann

Production Design Production Design

Wolfgang Burmann

Composers Composers

Alejandro Amenábar Mariano Marín

Sound Sound

Pelayo Gutiérrez Ricardo Steinberg Nacho Royo-Villanova

Costume Design Costume Design

Makeup makeup.

Paca Almenara

Sogepaq Las Producciones del Escorpión S.L.

Releases by Date

11 apr 1996, 26 jun 1997, 22 nov 1997, 22 apr 2003, 07 oct 2009, releases by country.

  • Physical 18

Netherlands

  • Theatrical 16
  • Physical 16 DVD

South Korea

  • Theatrical 18

125 mins   More at IMDb TMDb Report this page

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Thesis (1996)

Thesis Movie Review

…………………………………………………

Thesis Movie Review

Thesis (Tesis) is a 1996 Spanish horror thriller film directed by Alejandro Amenabar and starring Ana Torrent . It’s such an intense movie.

………………………………………………….

“ My name is Angela.

They’re going to kill me “

…………………………………………………..

A Spanish film student finds a videotape showing the torture and murder of a missing student. I was really happy with how this movie turned out. It’s a very diverse film as it’s a horror thriller with strong crime mystery elements, but it’s above all else genuinely suspenseful and truly disturbing in a couple of chilling scenes.

The most impressive thing about this film is how it treats its subject matter. That is what makes it a truly sophisticated, but also edgy viewing experience. For a movie about snuff movies that represent the worst and most depraved and inhuman part of humanity, it is surprisingly devoid of truly graphic, horrendous sequences. Some of those start the film for sure, but then the attention is directed toward true terror, which is the expectancy of the worst, making the picture incredibly suspenseful.

I was honestly really disturbed and frightened in a couple of hard-hitting scenes, especially those surrounding the videotapes themselves and the various black-and-white footage that was so creepy to me. I also have to strongly praise the sophistication of its themes. The snuff movie itself was well explained to us (maybe even too well) and the whole film school angle was excellent. What deserves special praise is the psychosexual aspect to it as the protagonist is actually sexually attracted toward violence and the idea of serial killers. That aspect made it especially complex and even more depraved.

Ana Torrent is fantastic. Her acting is consistently believable and wonderful. Angela is such a complex woman who is always scared and timid, but also truly curious about the darkest corners of humanity and at the end she even gets sexual arousal from it. Her journey to move away from that dangerous fetish in a way is what made her arc simply compelling. On the other hand, she was too dumb in certain moments, which made some scenes very implausible.

Fele Martinez as Bosco is very good, but I personally found it somewhat disappointing that he ended up being the killer. It was an interesting choice to have us believe that he is too obvious to be a killer, but then to have him be the killer at the end. I still have mixed thoughts about it, especially in regards to the horror chase scenes that felt too clichéd for this very authentic movie besides that.

I loved Eduardo Noriega’s Chema . He was this very realistic nerd character who has a darker edge to him, but is at the end of the day a good person. The relationship between the two was wonderful and very well realized, especially the very sweet ending that finally led to their first date. Jorge Castro , the professor, was incredibly creepy and menacing (the reveal scene in the office was the film’s best, most intense scene) while Figueroa himself was quite a tragic figure that served as an incredibly intriguing, dark catalyst for the entire story to unfold.

Tesis is very well shot, well written in script and dialogue and mostly believable in its elaborately structured twists and turns. The film flies by how fun it is while the direction from Alejandro Amenabar is outstanding. It is hard to imagine that this was his debut. It just goes to show that he’s one of Spain’s most precious cinematic commodities.

With great performances, many superb twists and turns, and such a fascinating, complex protagonist, Tesis is a horror thriller that is above all else incredibly suspenseful and at times even genuinely disturbing. It treats its subject matter with a lot of sophistication while the psychosexual aspect is also quite memorable. It’s a chilling genre film that benefits from Amenabar’s outstanding direction, especially commendable for a debut.

My rating – 4.5, more stories, miracle on 34th street (1947), the judge (2014).

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Snuff movies, true-crime TV shows and other forms of violent entertainment figure heavily in restrained thriller about a film student who becomes the star in her own life-or-death drama. Newcomer Alejandro Amenabar provides an inventive plot and a sufficient supply of red herrings. Could click in the international video market with savvy handling.

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Snuff movies, true-crime TV shows and other forms of violent entertainment figure heavily in the plot of “Thesis,” a surprisingly restrained thriller about a film student who becomes the star in her own life-or-death drama. Newcomer Alejandro Amenabar provides an inventive plot and a sufficient supply of red herrings, but fails to sustain suspense in the pic’s draggy second half. Theatrical prospects are iffy. Even so, “Thesis” could click in the international video market with savvy handling.

Ana Torrent is well cast as Angela, a Madrid film student who wants to write her thesis on violence in movies. Her faculty adviser offers to help by searching the university’s archives for violent videos. Unfortunately, he wanders into a secret storage room and picks up an unmarked videocassette, and he’s shocked into a fatal heart attack while viewing the tape.

Angela discovers her mentor dead in a university screening room. Impulsively, she steals the tape he was watching. At home, she discovers the video is a recording of the torture-murder of a co-ed who disappeared three years earlier.

Rather than alert the police, Angela decides to investigate on her own. She seeks info about violent video from an eccentric classmate, Chema (Fele Martinez), an avid fan of porno and splatter movies. He looks at the snuff video and immediately recognizes that it was shot with a special model of video camera. Just a few days later, Angela spots one of those cameras in the hands of a handsome student, Bosco (Eduardo Noriega), who just happens to know the long-missing co-ed.

Amenabar effectively develops a slow-simmering attraction between Angela and Bosco, slyly hinting that she may be drawn to him because of the danger he possibly represents. Meanwhile, Chema fumes jealously and does a great deal to arouse audience suspicion. Other prime suspects include Castro (Javier Elorriaga), Angela’s new faculty adviser; and Yolanda (Rosa Campillo), Bosco’s possessive girlfriend.

Despite some whopping improbabilities — would snuff movie producers really hide their master tapes in a university storage room? –“Thesis” generates genuine tension. Pic also manages a few pointed comments about the relationship between violence and voyeurism, particularly in a final scene that has the host of a Spanish tabloid TV show warning viewers that they’re about to see a clip from a snuff movie. The viewers appear to be raptly attentive.

Torrent manages the difficult trick of seeming intelligent even when her character does some pretty dumb things. Martinez is aptly ambiguous in his portrayal of the surly Chema.

Hans Burmann’s moody cinematography is a major asset. Other tech values are first-rate.

According to pic’s production notes, Amenabar is, at 23, the youngest feature filmmaker in Spain. It will be interesting to see whether he can fulfill the promise he displays here.

  • Production: A Las Productions del Escorpion production. Produced by Jose Luis Cuerda. Executive producer, Emiliano Otegui Piedra. Directed, written by Alejandro Amenabar.
  • Crew: Camera (color), Hans Burmann; editor , Maria Elena Saenz De Rozas; music, Amenabar, Mariano Marin; art direction, Wolfgang Burmann; sound (Dolby), Goldstein & Steinberg; assistant director, Walter Prieto. Reviewed at Berlin Film Festival (Panorama), Feb. 16, 1996. Running time: 125 MIN.
  • With: Angela ... Ana Torrent Chema ...Fele Martinez Bosco ... Eduardo Noriega Sena ... Nieves Harranz Yolanda ... Rosa Campillo Figueroa ... Miguel Picazo Castro ... Javier Elorriaga

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Jotted Lines

A Collection Of Essays

Tesis / Thesis (1996 Movie): Summary & Analysis

Summary: .

Film student Ángela is writing her thesis on violence in audiovisual media. At the university, she discovers the body of her thesis director, Prof. Figueroa, who died while watching a video that turns out to be a snuff film. The plot of this psychological thriller unfolds through Ángela’s research on the disappearance of a former classmate, tortured and murdered on tape. Unsure about whom to trust, Ángela is targeted as the next victim as she draws closer to exposing an underground ring of snuff films produced by a fellow student and professor. Set in the 1990s, the film engages a critique of violence in television and film, market forces producing audiovisual media, and voyeuristic desires of audiences, as well as the burgeoning practices of security camera vigilance in public spaces. 

Amenábar’s feature-length debut, a psychological thriller of the intrigue genre about ‘snuff’ film, is in many ways an exploration into the darkest underside of the demand for spectacle in which visual media are produced, whether for television or film. As the film student Ángela pursues research for her thesis on audiovisual violence (‘a daily occurrence in film and television’), her desire to view footage all too graphic to appear in the media is eclipsed by the dangers of exposing an underground ring of snuff films produced in the university. It is this turn from Ángela’s interest in viewing graphic violence to the threat that she herself could become the next victim of a snuff film which structures the narrative for viewers, similarly to the genre of a detective thriller whodunit, in which all relationships outside the family are suspect. The ensuing intrigue confronts viewers with complex questions about spectatorship itself in which the morbid interest in seeing tortured and mutilated bodies censored from the public eye is satisfied by an underground market that must ‘give the audience what it wants to see’, as Professor Castro (one author of the snuff ring) lectures to his film students. In this sense, the notion of desire constructed in the film is understood as a complex, intersecting terrain of psychological, market-driven, and sociocultural factors which generate, at once, the spectator’s libidinal desire to consume censored images, an underground market of snuff film produced in response to the demand for violence, and the gendered roles of the characters as either objects or perpetrators of this violence, among others. The demand for morbid images, in other words, exists within a market economy inseparable from the characters’ fascination with and horror for ‘real’ explicit visual material that is censored or in the case of Ángela’s research subject, conspicuous in the media. 

Notably, it is only once Ángela perceives that she is being pursued as the next victim of the snuff ring, as the very object of filmed violence which both terrifies and intrigues her, that her desire to view graphic images begins to wane, leading her to abandon her research altogether by the end of the film. Nevertheless, Ángela’s ambiguous transformation from a subject who desires to see recorded violence to become herself a target of ‘real’ violence is not entirely clear given that Amenábar constructs desire for his audience in less simplistic terms.1 Viewers are shown images of Ángela peeking through her fingers to catch a glimpse of the filmed horror that so fascinates her, an ambivalence which is evidently more complex in her character’s psychological portrait. For, Ángela also fantasises about a sexual encounter with the suspect Bosco in a disturbing dream sequence which oscillates between Ángela’s terrified resistance to her aggressor, who subdues her in bed with a suggestive phallic switchblade, and her erotic attempt held at knifepoint to seduce Bosco, which could be read as a survival tactic were it not for the director’s choice to portray this scene disturbingly with evident lust. To her horror, a dreaming Ángela realises that she is being filmed during the sex act, as an object of desire targeted for annihilation, which draws a clear parallel for the film’s viewers between woman as object in pornography and the brutal victimisation of the innocent in snuff. This parallel is furthermore reinforced by an earlier shot of the university film catalogue in which hardcore ‘pornography and other films’ (snuff) are categorised and archived together. The dream sequence, along with the late revelation that Ángela has been filmed secretly at home by her co-researcher Chema – a recording in which she caresses and kisses the image of Bosco displayed on the television screen – emphasises the perverse trappings of a desire through which Ángela’s character, unknown to the film’s audience, had demonstrated a conscious, invested sexual interest in the suspect Bosco, caught on tape. The voyeuristic recording likewise exposes her projected desire for simulacrum in the form of images (in film, television), a scene with greater social implications than Ángela’s character portrait alone. Sexual desire is played out similarly in displaced ways among other characters, in Bosco’s attempt to seduce Ángela’s unsuspecting younger sister, in Ángela’s ‘feigned’ kiss with Bosco in order to distance her sister from the suspected assassin, in the alleged jealousy of Bosco’s girlfriend towards Ángela, in Chema’s voyeuristic recording of Ángela, and even between men in Bosco and Chema’s former friendship which remained a secret to Ángela, a suspicious matter when this bond was revealed to her by Bosco’s girlfriend. 

In this sense, Ángela’s confession earlier in the film ‘I don’t like to be recorded’ echoes Amenábar’s recurrent questioning of camera vigilance and its blurred distinction between the public eye and private intimacy, whether subjects are deliberately filmed, as in these scenes, or passively recorded by the university’s security cameras which provide evidence to incriminate Ángela in the discovery of Professor Figueroa’s dead body in the auditorium. Viewers might draw an immediate comparison between the growing presence of security cameras in public space at the time of the film’s release and Amenábar’s critique of camera vigilance, both public and private. Moving beyond this initial assessment, the film also suggests that even when institutional vigilance is justified under the guise of security (i.e., mandated by the university or state), and thereby presumably void of subjective interest, a voyeuristic desire indeed underpins authority and serves to both conserve and usurp it; as viewers will remember, the closed circuit cameras incriminate Ángela, but also film Professor Castro’s suspicious lurking presence in the university film archive before Figueroa’s death. 

In its increasingly muddied distinction between the public and private, intimacy and vigilance, the film also problematises the strict separation between access to mediated (recorded or simulated) violence in the form of images and ‘real violence’ experienced in the first person.2 Viewers are reminded throughout the film that any absolute distinction between the ‘mediated’ and the ‘real’ – whether desire, violent images, or otherwise – is ultimately ungrounded. Ángela asks Chema if he has ever seen a real dead body, which gives way to two interpretations: Chema asserts that he has, in the explicit video recordings he watches with Ángela, and yet to the contrary, for Ángela audiovisual violence is not ‘real’ per se (she argues, ‘not on television, but a real dead body’). From the film’s opening sequence in a train station, in which Ángela approaches the train tracks desiring to view a ‘body split in two’ that is never actually seen (through the camera that occupies her first-person gaze), Amenábar structures the film’s imagery, and at times Ángela’s sight, through similar camerawork that seldom shows significant footage of gore, if at all.3 Instead, the characters’ horror is transmitted to the audience through shots of their expressions when viewing the snuff film and, most importantly, through the viewer’s psychological response when imagining violent images through the use of diegetic and non-diegetic sound, particularly in the victim’s chilling screams for help as she is being tortured. In fact, Amenábar’s choice not to show viewers significant violence or gore, but rather to play on the viewer’s horror by imagining this violence through sound, is perhaps most noteworthy for film students interested in Amenábar’s use of diegetic and non-diegetic sound in conjunction with the full omission of visual information (i.e. established as a motif in the opening sequence with a recorded voice-off which fades to the first frame).4 Chema and Ángela’s tense adventure into the cellar of the university archives, equipped with only a box of matches that must be lit consecutively, also plays with the audience’s ability to see only the duration of each lighted match, interspersed with shots of complete darkness which play upon the viewer’s expectations of surprise in the thriller genre. Such is the nature of Ángela’s psychological, imaginative horror when she chooses not to view the snuff film, at first, but darkens her television screen through the contrast function so that only the audio recording can be heard, which proves disturbing for her character in later scenes, as she listens obsessively to the film’s audio recording on her portable tape recorder. 

Nevertheless, it should be noted that when violent images are shown to the film’s viewers, Amenábar often chooses to demonstrate the characters’ ability to analyse them critically. For, the rapid advances in digital camera technology at the time are what lead Chema and Ángela to deduce the brand of camera used to record the snuff film, through a close analysis of the recording’s image quality, as well as the camera’s date of release and purchase, which would serve as vital information to track down Professor Castro and Bosco as leaders of the snuff ring. Chema and Ángela furthermore provide a ‘close visual reading’ of the quick jump cuts in post-production editing, which aim to delete the victim’s mention of her torturer’s name, allowing them to conclude that the victim knows her murderer. It could be argued that these two fundamental pieces of information, used to crack the case, are derived from the protagonists’ critical analysis of graphic images, providing a similar key to Amenábar’s proposal for his viewers to deconstruct their own relationship to violence with critical reflection. 

One should note that the word morbo used to describe Ángela’s ‘morbid’ desire to view extreme, violent images, is defined in Spanish as both ‘an unhealthy interest in persons or things’ and ‘an attraction to unpleasant events’. In this sense, the film’s dark reflection on spectatorship and the morbid fascination with explicit images in the media may be traced to the film’s release, contemporary to the upsurge in violence in Spanish cinema at the time, noted by Jordan and MorganTamosunas, Klodt, Moreiras-Menor and Tierney, among others, as well as the flourishing of the first private television networks in Spain in the 1990s. Summarised in the market-driven maxim of Professor Castro on the film industry, to provide viewers literally with what they most desire to see, programming in commercial television is largely dependent upon the number of viewers in a given audience share, supported by advertising spots (see Maxwell 1995). It is no surprise that Amenábar closes the film, then, with a sequence of images from a fictitious sensationalist news show, Justice and Law, whose anchor summarises the ‘unbelievable’ and ‘macabre’ story of gruesome murders of disappeared girls found on tape. Framing for her audience that it is ‘not easy for us to show these images,’ the anchor both conditions the viewer’s expectations before seeing the footage (‘and now, the images you’ve been waiting for’) and justifies the broadcast as ‘a document by itself’, unmediated and lacking critical analysis. In this final sequence, the camera shows Chema and Ángela walking through the hallway of a hospital, interspersed with images of patients fixated on the same television broadcast, a suggestive critique of a greater social desire to view violence in televised media, which is not altogether unique to Spain.5 Keeping in mind the film’s potential to question intimacy, vigilance, and the increasingly blurry distinction between the public and private – a more subtle gesture than the explicit nature of extreme violence in the film’s exploration of snuff – one could conclude in this final scene that Amenábar proposes a greater social critique of the production of and desire to consume images in a market-driven economy that jettisons ethical considerations in favour of audience share or box office revenue. In other words, the viewing audience most desires to consume, with morbid fascination, not only violence but voyeurism in which private matters are made public – the form of television programming that defines sensationalist news media and the gossip varieties of popular talk shows that turn the intimate details of private lives into spectacle-driven commodities for mass consumption. After all, perhaps summarised most disturbingly for the film’s viewers, when Ángela kisses the television screen, her secret desire for the assassin is only made public, terrifyingly and intriguingly so for the viewing audience, when caught on tape. 

Notes 

1. As Cristina Moreiras-Menor argues, ‘Lejos … de ser una película que trabaja exclusivamente en torno a la mirada fascinada del sujeto contemporáneo hacia la violencia, Tesis va más allá al exponer tanto su razón, la espectacularización masiva e indiferencia de la realidad, como su origen, la formación del sujeto y la manipulación de su mirada a la realidad a partir de procesos simbólicos de educación asentados fundamentalmente en estructuras de poder (institucionalizadas) que privilegian la espectacularización consumista del lado más sórdido de la naturaleza humana y social’ [Far … from being a film that works exclusively around the fascinated gaze of the contemporary subject towards violence, Tesis goes beyond this to expose both its raison d’être, mass spectacularization and indifference towards reality, and its origin, the formation of the subject and manipulation of the subject’s view of reality from symbolic processes of education seated fundamentally in (institutionalized) structures of power that privilege consumerist spectacularization of human and social nature’s most sordid side.] (Moreiras-Menor 2002: 260). 

2. See Dolores Tierney, ‘The Appeal of the Real in Snuff: Alejandro Amenábar’s Tesis (“Thesis”)’, Spectator – The University of Southern California Journal of Film and Television, Vol. 22, No. 2, Fall 2002, pp. 45–55. 

3. As Amenábar notes, ‘opté por el camino opuesto, mirando hacia el otro lado, a la cara de los actores, jugando con la proyección psicológica del espectador, con lo que no está viendo, con lo que se está imaginando’ [I chose the opposite route, looking the other way, at the actors’ faces, playing with the psychological projection of the viewer, with what one is not seeing, with what one is imagining.] (Marchante 2002: 59). 

4. See Dominique Russell, ‘Sounds like Horror: Alejandro Amenábar’s Thesis on AudioVisual Violence’, Canadian Journal of Film Studies, Vol. 15, No. 2, Fall 2006, pp. 81–95. 

5. See Jason E. Klodt, ‘En el fondo te gusta: Titillation, Desire, and the Spectator’s Gaze in Alejandro Amenábar’s Tesis’, Studies in Hispanic Cinemas, Vol. 4, No. 1, 2007, pp. 3–17. 

Cast and Crew:

[Country: Spain. Production Company: Las Producciones del Escorpión and SOGEPAQ. Director: Alejandro Amenábar. Executive producers: José Luis Cuerda and Emiliano Otegui. Screenwriters: Alejandro Amenábar and Mateo Gil. Cinematographer: Hans Burmann. Music: Alejandro Amenábar and Mariano Marín. Editor: María Elena Sáinz de Rozas. Cast: Ana Torrent (Ángela), Fele Martínez (Chema), Eduardo Noriega (Bosco Herranz), Xabier Elorriaga (Castro), Miguel Picazo (Figueroa), Nieves Herranz (Sena), Rosa Campillo (Yolanda).] 

Further Reading 

Barry Jordan and Rikki Morgan-Tamosunas, Contemporary Spanish Cinema, Manchester University Press, Manchester and New York, 1998. 

Oti Rodríguez Marchante, Amenábar, vocación de intriga, Madrid, Páginas de Espuma, 2002. 

Steven Marsh and Parvati Nair (eds), Gender and Spanish Cinema, Oxford and New York, Berg, 2004. 

Rosanna Maule, ‘Cultural Specificity and Transnational Address in the New Generation of Spanish Film Authors: The Case of Alejandro Amenábar’, in Cristina Sánchez-Conejero (ed.), Spanishness in the Spanish Novel and Cinema of the 20th-21st Century, Newcastle, Cambridge Scholars, 2007, pp. 107–20. 

Richard Maxwell, The Spectacle of Democracy: Spanish Television, Nationalism, and Political Transition, Minneapolis, MN, University of Minneapolis Press, 1995. 

Cristina Moreiras-Menor, Cultura herida: Literatura y cine en la España democrática, Madrid, Ediciones Libertarias, 2002. 

Joan Ramon Resina (ed.), Burning Darkness: A Half Century of Spanish Cinema, Albany, NY, State University of New York Press, 2008. 

Paul Julian Smith, Television in Spain, from Franco to Almodóvar, Woodbridge, UK and Rochester, New York, Tamesis, 2006. 

Source Credits:

The Routledge Encyclopedia of Films, Edited by Sarah Barrow, Sabine Haenni and John White, first published in 2015.

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Thesis 1996

Horror , Thriller

7 (8 votes)

Thesis

While doing a thesis about violence, Ángela finds a snuff video where a girl is tortured to death. Soon she discovers that the girl was a former student at her college...

snuff film murder investigation unlikely hero research madrid spain kidnapping psychopath snuff friends film in film serial killer thesis psycho video tape college student

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Nate H. reviewed Thesis (1996)

Review from the comment A college student writing a paper on the effect on society of violence in media asks her professor to recommend her material to research. When the professor turns up dead, she finds herself at the center of peril. Of course, that doesn’t stop her from embarking on her own mission to find out what the professor was looking into. She joins forces with an outcast classmate who is an expert on horror films and the two form an odd couple detective team which is all a little ridiculous considering the circumstances. However, Thesis’s jacket of Hitchcockian influence looks pretty good at times. In the end, a whodunit with little surprise as to who actually done it, it instead glides you forward with clever cinematography to make up for uninspired banter and boring characters.

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thesis 1996 review

Tesis (Original Motion Picture Soundtrack)

Different stars.

  • 1 Alejandro Amenabar Títulos Iniciales 1:26
  • 2 Alejandro Amenabar Figueroa 1:17
  • 3 Alejandro Amenabar Míralo Otra Vez 1:18
  • 4 Alejandro Amenabar Bosco 2:26
  • 5 Alejandro Amenabar Persecución 3:17
  • 6 Alejandro Amenabar Sueño 3:29
  • 7 Alejandro Amenabar Investigando 1:08
  • 8 Alejandro Amenabar Castro 1:57
  • 9 Alejandro Amenabar Snuff 1:29
  • 10 Alejandro Amenabar La Princesa y el Enano 5:48
  • 11 Alejandro Amenabar Beso en la Discoteca 0:41
  • 12 Alejandro Amenabar El Parque 0:44
  • 13 Alejandro Amenabar Ángela Encuentra la Cámara 2:08
  • 14 Alejandro Amenabar La Casa de Bosco 2:04
  • 15 Alejandro Amenabar Pelea en la Cocina 1:19
  • 16 Alejandro Amenabar El Garaje 1:17
  • 17 Alejandro Amenabar Me Van a Matar 1:13
  • 18 Alejandro Amenabar El Hospital 1:05
  • 19 Alejandro Amenabar Títulos Finales 2:33
  • Cast & Crew
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Despite some whopping improbabilities – would snuff movie producers really hide their master tapes in a university storage room? -"Thesis...

(The) director Alejandro Amenábar balances actual, terrifying visuals with Hitchcockian red herrings for one of the best debut films in years. The...

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Release details.

  • Duration: 125 mins

Cast and crew

  • Director: Alejandro Amenábar
  • Screenwriter: Alejandro Amenabar
  • Ana Torrent
  • Rafael Martínez
  • Eduardo Noriega
  • Nieves Herranz
  • Rosa Campillo

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Product Description

Spain released, Blu-Ray/Region A/B/C : it WILL NOT play on regular DVD player. You need Blu-Ray DVD player to view this Blu-Ray DVD: LANGUAGES: Spanish ( Dolby Digital 2.0 ), Spanish ( Dolby Linear PCM ), Spanish ( DTS 5.1 ), Spanish ( DTS-HD Master Audio ), English ( Subtitles ), Spanish ( Subtitles ), WIDESCREEN (1.85:1), SPECIAL FEATURES: Commentary, Interactive Menu, Making Of, Photo Gallery, Scene Access, Short Film, Storyboards, Trailer(s), SYNOPSIS: Why is death and violence so fascinating? Is it morally correct to show violence in movies? If so, is there a limit to what we should show? That's the subject of Ángela's examination paper. She is a young student at a film school in Madrid. Together with the student Chema (who is totally obsessed with violent movies) they find a snuff movie in which a young girl is tortured and killed. Soon they discover that the girl was a former student at their school... SCREENED/AWARDED AT: Cinema Writers Circle Awards, Spain, Fantasporto Awards, Goya Awards, ...Thesis (1996) ( Tesis )

Product details

  • MPAA rating ‏ : ‎ Unrated (Not Rated)
  • Package Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 7.48 x 5.31 x 0.5 inches; 4.23 ounces
  • Director ‏ : ‎ Alejandro Amenabar
  • Media Format ‏ : ‎ Import, Blu-ray, Widescreen, Subtitled
  • Run time ‏ : ‎ 125 minutes
  • Actors ‏ : ‎ Ana Torrent, Fele Martínez, Eduardo Noriega, Xabier Elorriaga, Julio Vélez
  • Subtitles: ‏ : ‎ English, Spanish
  • Producers ‏ : ‎ Thesis (1996) ( Tesis ), Thesis (1996), Tesis
  • Language ‏ : ‎ Spanish (Dolby Digital 2.0)
  • ASIN ‏ : ‎ B09TDMXFLW
  • Number of discs ‏ : ‎ 1
  • #11,839 in Drama Blu-ray Discs

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thesis 1996 review

never heard of this before! thank you for sharing it :) sy br liat bbrp film asal Spanyol dan menurut sy mereka bgs2 filmnya.

thesis 1996 review

Saya jg nemu film ini tanpa sengaja, Miss. Taunya bagus :)

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Beyoncé: Cowboy Carter review – from hoedown to full-blown genre throwdown

(Parkwood/Columbia) Straying far beyond its original country concept, the musician’s eighth album straddles the Beatles, the Beach Boys, the blues – and Becky with the Good Hair via Dolly Parton’s Jolene

A merican Requiem, the opening track of Beyoncé’s eighth studio album, is many things. It offers a touch of state-of-the-nation address – “Can we stand for something? Now is the time to face the wind” – and a sprinkling of the kind of vague but apparently personal lyrics that send social media into a frenzy of decoding: what are her “father’s sins” that Beyoncé has apparently “cleansed” herself of? Who are the “fairweather friends” for whom she claims to be planning “a funeral”?

It’s also a loud statement of what you might call Beyoncé’s bona fides. She is, she avers, “the grandbaby of a moonshine man [from] Gadsden, Alabama” who furthermore has roots in Louisiana. “They used to say I spoke too country,” she protests, adding: “What could be more country than that?”

In a sense, this all feels quite surprising. For years, Beyoncé has been in an unassailable critical position: everything she’s released has been greeted with huge sales, ecstatic reviews and lengthy reflections on her peerless artistry, thus affording her the ability to do whatever she wants. Equally, you can see why she might want to shore up her position when launching a venture into country and western – which is very much what Cowboy Carter has been trailed as – and not merely because her performance with the Dixie Chicks (now the Chicks) at the 2016 Country Music Association awards, while garnering the usual critical acclaim, attracted adverse online comment from viewers, some of it flatly racist.

Country isn’t so much a genre as a law unto itself. It’s traditionally very wary of musical outsiders – be they the Byrds or Ray Charles – and presided over by a notoriously reactionary Nashville establishment. Moreover, it’s traditionally a musical voice of the rural poor and working class: you don’t want to be perceived as a superstar dilettante who’s decided to dabble just because you can.

Cowboy Carter duly presents itself as a major statement – 27 tracks and 80 minutes long – and arrives complete with co-signs from Nashville elders. There are spoken word interludes by Willie Nelson and Dolly Parton, the latter drawing comparison between perfidious old Jolene and Becky with the Good Hair, the love rival in Beyoncé’s celebrated 2016 track Sorry. The latter’s favour is repaid with a cover of Jolene itself, which Parton has been publicly petitioning Beyoncé to record for years, albeit with a new middle eight and coda alongside fresh lyrics that substitute swaggering menace and threats for the original’s desperate pleading – desperate pleading not really being on-brand where Beyoncé is concerned.

Elsewhere, the singer circumvents the issue of what you sing a country song about if you’re worth an estimated $800m (£634m) by indulging in murder ballad-esque storytelling on Daughter – which underlines the drama with a burst of 18th-century opera, and recasting her early years in Destiny’s Child in Nashville-friendly terms on 16 Carriages: “At 15 the innocence was gone astray / Had to leave my home at an early age,” she sings, making herself sound more like an outcast unmarried mother than someone who went on tour supporting Dru Hill and SWV.

You can say that amounts to laying it on a bit thick, but both Daughter and 16 Carriages are fantastic songs: acoustic guitars playing host to strong melodies and, on the latter, a vocal delivery that carries the distinctive patterns of rap. In fact, there are a lot of fantastic songs in the first part of Cowboy Carter, although its sheer length starts proving a problem. Her cover of the Beatles’ Blackbird is astute – Paul McCartney wrote it in tribute to the Little Rock Nine, a group of nine Black students who faced discrimination after enrolling in the all-white Little Rock high school in 1957 – if inessential, and there’s a distinct qualitative sag in the middle. It’s remedied by the simple expedient of going wildly off-piste: if the lambent soft-rock of Bodyguard gets you wondering whether the “departure into country” tag strictly fits Cowboy Carter, the sudden appearance of a straightforward hip-hop track, Spaghetti, confirms that it isn’t.

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Thereafter the album goes nuts. Ya Ya offers a fantastic early psychedelic soul-influenced stomp that throws in a sample of Nancy Sinatra’s These Boots Are Made for Walking, an interpolation from the Beach Boys’ Good Vibrations and what sounds like a lyrical reference to Mickey and Sylvia’s 1958 hit Love Is Strange. Riverdance and II Hands II Heaven return to the house music influence of Beyoncé’s last album Renaissance. Oh Louisiana is 52 seconds of bluesy funk with a vocal sped up to helium pitch. It’s all incredibly well done and hugely entertaining, but the sense that the album is clinging on to its original concept by its fingernails – throwing in the odd lyric about rhinestones or whisky and the occasional intimation of pedal steel guitar – is hard to avoid.

You wonder if Cowboy Carter might have worked better split into two separate albums, with one concentrating purely on the country-influenced/acoustic material: there are moments when it starts to feel less like a coherent statement than one of those long 21st-century albums that offers listeners a selection box of tracks to pick and choose playlist additions from. Or perhaps its wild lurches into eclecticism are the point. Unwieldy as it is, it displays its author’s ability to bend musical styles to her will, be they country, hip-hop or the baroque post-psychedelic easy listening that seems to lurk beneath the vocal gymnastics of My Rose. If the results don’t quite hold together, Cowboy Carter still proves Beyoncé is impressively capable of doing whatever she wants.

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  1. Thesis (1996)

    Witchfinder-General-666 12 July 2006. "Tesis" is not only a tantalizing Horror Thriller, but is also an intelligent study of people's fascination with death and the imagery of death. Several movies about the topic of snuff films have come up in the last several years (8 MM, for example), this one is definitely the best.

  2. Thesis

    Thesis. 1996, Mystery & thriller/Horror, 2h 5m. 12 Reviews 5,000+ Ratings ALL CRITICS TOP CRITICS VERIFIED AUDIENCE ALL AUDIENCE. You might also like See More Psycho. Switchblade Romance ...

  3. Film Review: Tesis (1996)

    REVIEW: Directed by Alejandro Amenabar. Starring: Ana Torrent, Fele Martinez. Original title: Tesis. After this superb initial set-up, the film descends into a silly thriller in which the sleuths are followed by the murderers who made the tape. And with only two possible culprits at hand, the film flits between the suspects, back and forth, and ...

  4. Thesis (1996) "Tesis"

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  5. Thesis (1996 film)

    Thesis (Spanish: Tesis) is a 1996 Spanish horror - thriller film. It is the feature debut of director Alejandro Amenábar and was written by Amenábar and Mateo Gil. It stars Ana Torrent, Fele Martínez and Eduardo Noriega. The film won seven Goya Awards including Best Film, Best Original Screenplay and Best Director.

  6. Thesis (1996)

    Thesis: Directed by Alejandro Amenábar. With Ana Torrent, Fele Martínez, Eduardo Noriega, Xabier Elorriaga. While doing a thesis about violence, Ángela finds a snuff video where a girl is tortured until death. Soon she discovers that the girl was a former student in her faculty...

  7. Thesis (1996) Movie Review

    Thesis (1996) Movie Review. Last updated on September 18th, 2023 by Mighil. I still clearly remember the first time I watched Alejandro Amenabar's 1996 thriller Thesis over a decade ago. As a young film buff in my early 20s, I always sought lesser-known films to expand my cinematic horizons beyond the typical Hollywood blockbusters. A friend ...

  8. I just finished Thesis (1996) and it was very good. : r/horror

    In this 1996, 2-hour long, Crime Horror Thriller. While working on her Thesis on the effects of audiovisual violence and the family, she stumbles upon a snuff film of someone from her campus, horror shenanigans ensue. While I didn't really enjoy the main character, her performance was saved by her on screen counterparts.

  9. ‎Thesis (1996) directed by Alejandro Amenábar

    While doing a thesis about violence, Ángela finds a snuff video where a girl is tortured until death. ... Thesis. 1996 'Tesis ... Review by Lola ★★★★ incel vs chad: the movie. Review by Jacob ★★★★ 12. Los delirios de Alfred Hitchcock han perseguido a toda una generación de cineastas, ...

  10. Thesis (1996)

    Thesis (1996) simbasible October 24, 2020 0 ... Thesis Movie Review. Thesis (Tesis) is a 1996 Spanish horror thriller film directed by Alejandro Amenabar and starring Ana Torrent. It's such an intense movie.

  11. Thesis (1996) was Enthralling : r/horror

    Thesis (1996) was Enthralling . It is an amazing debut by alejandro amenabar. He wrote part of it in university. It is a spanish movie about a film student writing a thesis about violence in film and she finds a snuff film. It keeps you on the edge of your seat. You don't know what is around the corner.

  12. Thesis

    Feb 25, 1996 11:00pm PT Thesis Snuff movies, true-crime TV shows and other forms of violent entertainment figure heavily in restrained thriller about a film student who becomes the star in her own ...

  13. Thesis (1996) was a Taut and Suspenseful Thriller : r/movies

    Thesis (1996) was a Taut and Suspenseful Thriller. It is an amazing debut by alejandro amenabar. He wrote part of it in university. It is a spanish movie about a film student writing a thesis about violence in film and she finds a snuff film. It keeps you on the edge of your seat.

  14. Tesis / Thesis (1996 Movie): Summary & Analysis

    Summary: Film student Ángela is writing her thesis on violence in audiovisual media. At the university, she discovers the body of her thesis director, Prof. Figueroa, who died while watching a video that turns out to be a snuff film. The plot of this psychological thriller unfolds through Ángela's research on the disappearance of a former ...

  15. Thesis 1996

    Thesis (1996) Movie Review by The Gravedigger: 02.29.04: In this Spanish made film a young film student is doing her thesis on violence in movies and how it affects the viewer. She asks her professor to obtain some violent films for her from the school archives and he reluctantly agrees. But he accidently comes across a hidden room containing ...

  16. Thesis (1996)

    While doing a thesis about violence, Ángela finds a snuff video where a girl is tortured to death. ... Watch trailer Add to timeline Delete from watchlist Add to watchlist Write a review . ... Where to watch Powered by JustWatch. Release date 04/11/1996 Directors Alejandro Amenábar, Mateo Gil Writers Alejandro Amenábar, Mateo Gil.

  17. Thesis (movie, 1996)

    A younger professor, Castro, takes over the supervision of Ángela's thesis project. At Chema's house, Ángela discovers the stolen tape is a snuff film in which a woman is tortured, killed, and disemboweled. Chema recognizes the victim is a student from their university named Vanessa, who went missing two years previously.

  18. Thesis (1996) Ending Explained

    #HauntingTubeJoin our DISCORD: https://discord.gg/QEFa9NkCheck out Logi Plays: https://youtu.be/NuniZ6V21k0Thesis Synopsis:Tesis (English: Thesis) is a 1996 ...

  19. Thesis 1995, directed by Alejandro Amenábar

    A slick thriller muddled by its attempt to give its basic woman-in-peril theme a serious spin: it condemns our morbid interest in producing and watching violent images, then proceeds to satisfy it ...

  20. A Guide to Writing the Dissertation Literature Review

    Borg, and Gall (1996) estimate that completion of an acceptable dissertation literature review will take between three and six months of effort. The purpose of this guide is to collect and summarize the most relevant information on how to write a dissertation literature review. I begin with a discussion of

  21. Thesis (1996) ( Tesis ) [ Blu-Ray, Reg.A/B/C Import

    Amazon.com: Thesis (1996) ( Tesis ) [ Blu-Ray, Reg.A/B/C Import - Spain ] : Ana Torrent, Fele Martínez, Eduardo Noriega, Xabier Elorriaga, Julio Vélez, Miguel Picazo, ... Images in this review Sort reviews by Top reviews. Top reviews from the United States There was a problem filtering reviews right now. ...

  22. Vampibots: Review: Thesis (1996)

    Review: Thesis atau Tesis, adalah film debut dari sutradara asal Spanyol, Alejandro Amenabar.Publik internasional mungkin mengenalnya lewat film-film seperti Abre Los Ojos (Open Your Eyes-- yang kemudan di-remake menjadi Vanilla Sky), The Others (2001) serta The Sea Inside (2004) yang meraih Best Foreign Language Film Oscar tahun 2005 kemarin. Amenabar menulis script film panjang debutnya ini ...

  23. Beyoncé: Cowboy Carter review

    Beyoncé: Texas Hold 'Em - video. Cowboy Carter duly presents itself as a major statement - 27 tracks and 80 minutes long - and arrives complete with co-signs from Nashville elders. There ...