Suspiria - -2018-
Argento gave us a nightmare you could dance to. Guadagnino gave us a history lesson you can’t wake up from.
Tilda Swinton, in a triple role (including a startlingly prosthetic turn as the ancient, necrotic Mother Markos), anchors the film’s central argument: What does power look like when men are irrelevant? suspiria -2018-
In one of the decade's most shocking sequences, a dancer named Olga is punished by the coven. As Susie performs a furious, trance-like solo in a mirrored studio, Olga’s body is twisted and shattered in real time across the room. Her bones snap like dry twigs. Guadagnino holds the shot. He makes you watch. It is a visceral, agonizing scene that reminds you: magic in this world is not sparkles. It is torsion, leverage, and breaking. Here is where Guadagnino outpaces the original. Set against the "German Autumn" of 1977—a period of terrorist bombings, hijackings, and state paranoia— Suspiria becomes a metaphor for the monstrous feminine buried beneath patriarchy. Argento gave us a nightmare you could dance to
Dakota Johnson plays Susie Bannion, a shy Mennonite from Ohio who arrives in Berlin with raw, untapped talent. But this is not Black Swan . The choreography by Damien Jalet is not beautiful; it is occult geometry. The dancers contort themselves into ritualistic shapes that seem to dislocate reality. In one of the decade's most shocking sequences,