A journalist descends into the dark underbelly of the Iranian holy city of Mashhad as she investigates the serial killings of sex workers by the so called "Spider Killer", who believes he is cleansing the streets of sinners.
Zar Amir Ebrahimi
Rahimi
Mehdi Bajestani
Saeed
Arash Ashtiani
Sharifi
Forouzan Jamshidnejad
Fatima
Sina Parvaneh
Rostami
Nima Akbarpour
Judge
Sara Fazilat
Zinab
Alice Rahimi
Somayeh
Ali Nazarian
Lawyer
Sima Seyed
Saeed's Mother
Firouz Ageli
Hagi
Farhad Faghih Habibi
Prosecutor
Mesbah Taleb
Ali
Ariane Naziri
Soghra
Majd Eid
Photographer
Sohaib Qishta
Gholam
Maryam Taleb
Khadijeh
Salma Alabed
Zahra
Diana Al Hussen
Somayeh's Daughter
Soraya Helly
Zari Khanum
Hazem Elian
Taxi Driver
Marie Jo Khojandi
Old Prostitute
Haidar Qaraeen
Old Man at Bakery #1
Jawdat Saleh
Old Man at Bakery #2
Jeries Al Nahas
Sandwich Shop Owner
Laze Manaskov
Man on Motorcycle
Serwan Kareem
Police Officer #1
Mohammad Khasawneh
Police Officer #2
Hussam Al Mohisen
Forensic Expert
Foad Hameed
Farmer
Dilarom Khushvakhtovna
Older Lady
Omar Alashoush
Boy in Shanty Town
Hamid Reza Javdan
Agha Rasul
Anwar Kethia
Kiosk Owner
Vali Jokar
Agha Jan
Zaha'a Nessan
Officer #1
Amir Habeeb
Officer #2
Mohammad Aljbore
Grocery Shop Owner
Lyandro Gethya 'Lulu'
Customer
Mohammad Rateb
Thin Man
Ahmad Rehyaneh
Somayeh's Father
Rokhshana Breshna Bahar
Somayeh's Mother
Baboka Zaki
Soldier
Wael Baghdadi
Executioner
Director, Writer
Ali Abbasi
Writer
Afshin Kamran Bahrami
January 23, 2023
7
Over a relatively short period of time, over a dozen dead women are found bundled by the roadside - and the police are baffled? The women have not been sexually assaulted, but strangled using a knot tied in their headscarves. Not convinced that everything is being done by the authorities, investigative journalist "Rahimi" (Zar Amir-Ebrahimi) decides to get to the truth. Meantime, we follow the life of taxi driver "Saeed" (Mehdi Bajestani) and his daily life helps us to realise that the deceased were prostitutes. Not that he uses them, but pretty soon we realise that the stories are connected. At this point the plot rather falls away - we get to the bottom of the murder-mystery a little too simplistically for my liking; but actually as that plot develops we realise that the whodunit element of the narrative is not the most important one. It rapidly becomes an evaluation of a judicial process - and of vocal popular opinion - that may just indicate that these killings are in someway justifiable. These women, were - after all, sinful and irredeemable. Can the killer capitalise on this zealousness and escape justice? It's quite an intriguing film that looks at how religious faith can butt - head to head - with civic justice; of how the ordinarily law-abiding public themselves can; of how a person can genuinely believe he is doing good by removing "stains" from his community... I cannot believe anyone from the West would watch this with anything other than a feeling of abhorrence at the offences, but this film does attempt to put both sides in a thought-provoking fashion. Though it didn't change my opinion, it did offer a balance that makes the last twenty minutes or so a lot less fait accompli than we might expect. Bajestani is good here and this is more than just a good vs. evil crime drama. Well worth a watch. Telly will be fine, though.