top of page

Anup Singh’s ‘The Song of Scorpions’ (Irrfan Khan, Golshifteh Farahani) is a minimalistic and magnificently twisted story of obsessive love

  • Writer: Trinity Auditorium
    Trinity Auditorium
  • May 1, 2023
  • 1 min read

Spoilers ahead…


the song of scorpions

Anup Singh’s previous film was the Partition-era saga , and the story revolved around a girl whose father decides to raise her as a boy. At one point, after years of wearing male attire (including a turban), when the girl wears “girl clothes”, she says she feels like there are scorpions crawling all over her body. The director’s new film carries that metaphor forward. One, there’s the title: . But more importantly, there’s that constant feeling that the film itself gives you – the feeling of scorpions all over your body. Under the placid surface, your skin crawls, and you never know when the sting will come. I haven’t seen Anup’s first film, , but based on and , he likes to narrate deceptively simple fables that are really about madnesses and obsessions. By definition, a fable is a simple creation, but Anup Singh clutters things up with queasy psychological complexities.

You can read the rest of the review here:

And you can watch the video review here:

Copyright ©2023 GALATTA.

 
 
 

Comments


Post: Blog2_Post

Subscribe Form

Thanks for submitting!

(213) 270-2839

©2022 by Hayat Hotel. Proudly created with Wix.com

bottom of page