'Wildhood' Review: Indigenous Kids Find Themselves in Each Other in Vivid Coming-of-Age DramaĢ022 Emmy Predictions: Who Will Win at the Primetime Emmy Awards?ģ0 Disturbing Foreign Films to Watch, from Gaspar Noé to Takashi Miike New Movies: Release Calendar for June 24, Plus Where to Watch the Latest Films That argument ends in a sudden, violent tragedy it’s also the first indication that Inés’ tenuous grasp on her surroundings may have something to do with an intangible evil following her, as eerie specters from her dreams creep into her awareness bit by bit. Inés’ saga begins on a tropical vacation with her new lover Leopardo (Daniel Hendler), a romantic cheeseball who grows jealous when he overhears her muttering in her sleep. As Inés hovers between her daily routine and the fictional worlds where she lends her voice, her reality grows more tenuous, as this smart and stylish supernatural descent explores what it means to make peace with inner demons by learning to confront them head-on.Ĭhanneling the psychological thrills of performance in “Black Swan” with a spooky audiovisual tapestry similar to Peter Strickland’s “Berberian Sound Studio,” Meta develops Inés’ conundrum through the accumulation of disturbing dreams that invade her everyday existence.
#Inner sound studio movie
Inés (Érica Rives) watches a schlocky, violent movie as she dubs the screams into a microphone, her hands in front of her face and her eyes wide with embellished fear. In “ The Intruder,” the haunting and sophisticated psychological thriller from Argentine director Natalia Meta, the symbolic potential is clear early on. There may be no better metaphor for an identity crisis than the art of the voiceover.