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Martyrs
Overlook Pick

Martyrs

They haven't finished being alive.
73
User Score3,041 ratings
TMDB 7.316+20081h 39mFrench
HorrorDramaThriller

Synopsis

A young woman’s quest for revenge against the people who kidnapped and tortured her as a child leads her and her best friend, also a victim of child abuse, on a terrifying journey into a living hell of depravity.

Director
Pascal LaugierFrom TMDB credits
Studio
Wild Bunch3 production companies
Release
June 12, 2008Released
Box Office
$1MBudget $7M

Top Cast

8 of 22
Morjana Alaoui
Morjana Alaoui
Anna Assaoui
Mylène Jampanoï
Mylène Jampanoï
Lucie Jurin
Catherine Bégin
Catherine Bégin
Mademoiselle
Robert Toupin
Robert Toupin
Father
Patricia Tulasne
Patricia Tulasne
Mother
Juliette Gosselin
Juliette Gosselin
Marie
Xavier Dolan
Xavier Dolan
Antoine
Jean-Marie Moncelet
Jean-Marie Moncelet
Étienne

Trailers & Photos

Reviews

From TMDB users
CipE
Feb 23, 2014

Rated this 5/10 due to large amounts of repeated and gratuitous violence. Is it worth torturing people to find out if there is life after death? This movie's answer seems to be "Keep doubting".

John Chard
Mar 17, 2014

Martyrs: Greek for Witness. Martyrs is written and directed by Pascal Laugier. It stars Morjana Alaoui and Mylene Jampanoi. The New French Extremity Movement had its bar raised considerably by Pascal Laugier’s brutal but thought provoking horror. It’s a film as uncompromising as it is confrontational, a picture guaranteed to get a response for better or worse. Once viewed it simply will not be forgotten, the images, the twisty narrative thematics and the bloodshed that flows consistently throughout the story, Laugier and his two brilliant lead actresses assault the senses, magnificently so. Story is unfurled as a three tiered structure, each one devastating, but it’s with the final third where the picture goes up through the stratosphere, stopping briefly at the café weird just to further tickle our craniums. Some of the violence here is tough to watch, and it’s no surprise to find it was met with the inevitable charges of misogyny. Yet the culmination of it all puts some perspective on the violence witnessed, leading to a strangely profound and moving climax. The less you know about it going in for the first time the better. A strong stomach is required, as is an open mind, if you have these things then awaiting you is a visceral masterwork, one of the finest horror film’s to have ever come out of France. Yes, it’s that astonishing. 10/10

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