Grave Torture (2024) Poster

(2024)

User Reviews

Review this title
16 Reviews
Sort by:
Filter by Rating:
8/10
Thought-provoking and respectful of my own exploration
EwinkWinkY12 April 2024
Horror movies. Often a genre synonymous with jump scares, gore, and mindless entertainment. While these elements can be thrilling, they rarely delve into the deeper recesses of the human psyche. They seldom grapple with the existential questions that gnaw at us in the quiet hours, the ones that keep us up at night. This is precisely why Joko Anwar's Siksa Kubur a.k.a. Grave Torture, struck such a profound chord with me. It dared to be different, to transcend the genre's limitations and offer a horror experience unlike any other.

Unlike its conventional counterparts, Siksa Kubur didn't shy away from the very questions I myself grapple with. These weren't the usual horror tropes - ghosts seeking revenge or vengeful spirits. Instead, the film delved into the complexities of fear of the unknown, the nature of good and evil, motives and consequences. It forced me to confront these unsettling realities head-on, making me a willing participant in its exploration of the human mind.

But what truly elevated from Siksa Kubur was its ability to offer insightful answers to these harrowing questions. It didn't bombard me with simplistic solutions or preachy pronouncements. Instead, the film presented its ideas through a masterfully crafted narrative, allowing me to arrive at my own interpretations. The terror wasn't simply a means to an end; it served as a catalyst for introspection. The scares, while undeniably effective, weren't the sole focus. They were meticulously woven into the narrative, each one serving to push me further down the rabbit hole of self-discovery.

This is not to say that the film shied away from genuine scares. Siksa Kubur delivered moments of pure, unadulterated terror. However, these moments were not gratuitous. They were meticulously placed, serving to heighten the emotional stakes and reinforce the film's central themes. The true brilliance lay in the way these scares intertwined with the exploration of the aforementioned questions. Each jump or moment of heart-pounding suspense added another layer to the film's tapestry, deepening the overall impact.

The film's characters also played a pivotal role in its success. They weren't simply one-dimensional archetypes, instead, they were complex individuals wrestling with their own internal demons, mirroring the struggles of the audience. Their journeys became our journeys, their fears resonated with our own anxieties. We empathized with their plight, becoming emotionally invested in their fate, which made the film's exploration of these profound themes all the more impactful.

Ultimately, Siksa Kubur served as more than just a horror film. It was a thought-provoking experience that challenged me to confront my own fears and grapple with the existential questions that linger in the shadows. It offered no easy answers, but instead, empowered me to forge my own path of understanding. In a genre often content with cheap thrills, Siksa Kubur dared to be different, offering a horror experience that was both terrifying and intellectually stimulating. It reminded me that horror, at its best, can be a powerful tool for introspection, forcing us to confront the darkness within and emerge, perhaps, with a newfound sense of self-awareness.
6 out of 7 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
8/10
Joko Anwar's typical plot twist
myanuar-8226214 April 2024
Watching films is not just entertainment, but there is value that we bring home. Joko Anwar offers psychological horror, which is the time for film lovers to move up from just bland exotic horror. The cinematography and tone are perfect, the acting of all the actors is seasoned, even though some actors are debutants, the scoring is great, and the plot twist at the ending is typical Joko Anwar. The film is only 1 hour 57 minutes long, but it would take perhaps a week to discuss it.

Watching the Joko Anwar film is like reading an interactive children's novel by R. A. Montgomery. We are stimulated to think, every scene contains a clue. In fact, the ending of the film is also up to each viewer's interpretation. Joko Anwar never forces his will in any of his films.
4 out of 5 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
6/10
Provocative, but going nowhere
daryopeek13 April 2024
Joko Anwar has been known to make films with notable standards like great characters, interesting premise to follow, provoking dialogues, and doses of gore here and there. Grave Torture checks all of the items, but unfortunately, it also checks Anwar's notorious trademark: a weak third act.

Anwar has always been a good storyteller. This movie is no exception. It has a bubbling mystery in every corner, asking me to guess in every scene, unrolled with witty, almost absurd, characters, to keep me on my seat along with amazing technical aspects, especially the sound design. Then, the third act comes.

It reminds me of all of his previous horror works where the plot becomes chaotic and blurred. I don't know how, but it felt really exploitative. There's not much of a story, just series of audience-engaging scenes masquerading as a climax. How is that justify all of the buildups? How is that going to answer all of the questions? Those questions keep me on my seat until suddenly, it ends.

I realized that Anwar is not responsible to make a film that I can fully understand. Maybe I am not smart enough for that. Maybe it's a trick to anticipates for possible sequel (if any). Or maybe, it's time for me to accept that Anwar's style will never going to a direction that I like. But, I think most of his climax is an easy way out for such lucrative plot development that he makes.

Then again, the climax stays in my head for two days. It does impactful.
6 out of 9 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
Looking to the Absurdism in Life After-Death (Siksa Kubur by Joko Anwar)
wulangdanendra28 April 2024
Life after death is not a new story that has emerged around us. From the animist era (kejawen) of Semar's disappearance to the realm of virtue to the concept of heaven and hell in the religion of Abraham, we are attached to the belief to do self-moral as a form of devotion to God. Interestingly, this movie does not try to reflect on moral boundaries, but instead challenges the general concept of each belief without offending any party. From the beginning, we are brought into the movie feeling various sides of emotions and the impression of injustice for deep wounds. Leading us to be unsure of the direction of this movie. I personally did not feel a deep impact when watching this movie the first time. But realized that there was a hidden message being carried. Creating various question marks about the direction of this film. Realizing that many feel this film is good, but for me personally this film is less able to describe an explicit picture or traumatic impression in death itself. Which is the soul of the movie itself. I realized that the director (from some media interviews) did not delve into that area, from the beginning he tried to open new doors to create a space for discussion. For me, this is unacceptable because it seems selfish and will exclude ordinary viewers who don't really dig the absurdity. If I reflect on this movie, it is more suitable to be juxtaposed with films like Shutter Island (2010) or Seven (1995). But I appreciate that Jokan (as fans call him) remains consistent in bringing his world. Given that quite a lot of people are fanatical about his work. Various theories are proposed and concluded, but not many are satisfying for me. I would personally recommend this movie for anyone who wants to explore further the psychological sides of humans rather than looking for trivial fears that are widely peddled in most Indonesian films.
2 out of 2 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
10/10
Splendid done Mas Joko
moehammadfahri11 April 2024
Awesome joko! This movie was best and fresh movement for bringing Indonesian film into the next level, and not even that. The atmosphere and music ambience it's giving a feel like you are in there what a situation in under grave's happen. If we transform into the entire of any aspect in this movie, i am not capable to deny that if the details. And playable with puzzling timeline. Could make you little bit confuse but in fact if you re-arrange the timeline you may understood how Well this movie was. As long as movie played, i just realize this movie is not just gives us some vision about "Grave Torture" looks but how long as someone capable to deny their faith about the religions perspective. Anyway Mas Joko i think on this eid days could be as your golden age in Indonesian Movie's industry! You do it well Mas Joko.
10 out of 17 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
6/10
Laughable
stevefmt16 April 2024
Warning: Spoilers
Normal people will do good things, be kind to each others and not committing sins to avoid grave torture but in this movie, they will do these things: 1. Killed lots of innocent people waiting to get discount donuts (I wonder if the director hate DUNKIN) 2. The ustadzah supplied rich pedophilia donator with santri boys while preaching about grave torture 3. Killed the adulteress nurse who already asked how to repent for her sin 4. The mob went to the street to kill each others or innocent bystander

I'm just hoping that 1.4 million people who have watched this movie will consider it as just a horror movie and nothing more.
2 out of 3 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
8/10
Joko Anwar's answer to Jacob's Ladder (1990)
hiraishinnojutsu18 April 2024
Probably not the best Joko has produced as some have pointed out, but it's the most enjoyable to me so far. Pacing's good, not too fast, not too slow. The story's pretty understandable too, well at least 80% of it without the help of forum and discussion. Open to different interpretations? Yep, it's not Joko if it's not. Funny thing is, the movie doesn't feel like religious to me (from one particular religion) if you think it through, as it has a universal message of humans in the face of death as they lie dying rather than it is about people finding out one particular religion is right, or in other words: More psychological than religious, more human than supernatural, a spiritual journey and reflection about the end we're all gonna face one day, even for those who don't believe.

8.5/10.
2 out of 2 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
If you survived ESQ and pesantren kilat and whatnot, you definitely can survive this.
mademoisherl18 April 2024
For the duration's worth and the marketing materials, I was expecting Joko Anwar to expand the discussion triggers on various perceptions of what would happen the moment someone was buried six feet under. Unfortunately, he spent too much time on the jumpscare build-up in the second act to fully develop his promising main characters, which made the story... kinda go nowhere.

The first act is solid, Widuri Puteri and Faradina Mufti did an immense job of making the seamless transition from young Sita to adult Sita. Her and Adil's childhood struggle is a stellar backstory, which is a shame that the follow-up in the second act felt cheap to handle their inner conflictions. Would love to see more screen time of young Sita and Adil in the pesantren because it would've given more betrayal value to add to drive Sita's motivation and also satisfactory value for what eventually happened to the villain. Personally, I wasn't invested enough in the villain to see his ass totally whipped as a payoff. The horror elements in the second act are what tickled me the most because for being something that supposedly affected Sita's state of mind, all of the events were actually meaningless and contradictory. Why bother making bad things happen to the people who don't deserve it when the point is that you'll reap what you sow before entering the afterlife?

Another thing is Adil's character journey. I feel like he had so much potential, especially with the exceptional delivery by the incomparable Reza Rahadian, that went wasted because the film didn't want to address him explicitly. For being half of the main characters, I wish we got more of his story shown.

All in all, the cast ensemble carried this film on their backs. No bad performances whatsoever. The sound design also popped off. If only the story is much stronger.
1 out of 1 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
10/10
Great psychological horror movie
mikhwankurniawan15 April 2024
Building a puzzle story with the power of strong dialogue, music and atmosphere is not easy. Even dialogue that could be controversial with the Islamic religious culture can be conveyed well, without offending anyone, everything is based on their own views, Mas Joko Anwar's greatness has been tested.

The messages conveyed can vary, perhaps some will be disappointed because the title of the film Torture the Grave seems to describe only the torture itself. But Joko Anwar offers something more than that.

A big injection for Indonesian horror movie, something truly fresh. Without selfishness, the meaning must be conveyed, but it is mixed very beautifully because of the diversity of different beliefs regarding the torment of the grave.
2 out of 3 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
6/10
There's Venom and Zombie, it is a superhero movie??
ufoalas-6559722 April 2024
Many people said, this film are like Christopher Nolan of Indonesia. But, sadly, Not!! There's too much people praising this film. "It's just like western movie" they said. "It's not about jump scare" or "It's more psychological film."

The atmosphere are great. The cinematography are good. The acting are top notch. That's the only positive things from this film.

The first half of the film is about our brave women, Sita. She try to find the truth about "Siksa Kubur" or Grave Torture. There's so much ideology battle, especially about religion through the film. Quite enjoyed it, yes, this "psychologycal" thing are so great.

Sadly, after that, when, Sita goes to the grave, it's became down hill! The ghosts are laughable. Why? Because it's literally more like alien, like Venom. And the other ghost just crawling in the wall like spiderman.

And there's literally Zombies in here! Just beat it, man!! Those old man zombies are not menancing enough!!

Many people said, the most "scary" scene are the washing machine scene. But, sorry, it's a big NO. Nothing scary, that's scene just make my eyes roll, because, it's soo dumb. They're literally in super rich nursing home, why the patient washed their clothes alone?? Yes, it's a part of "big twist" but too dumb.

And Sita suddenly became weak minded. She's a brave women like Spider-Woman or Katnis Everdreen from the get go, but why do that to her at the end?? Ugh.

They're claimed this film would make people "believe" about grave torture and repent. But at the end, i just thought, "did i watched some superhero movie"??
3 out of 7 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
9/10
Experience this in a theater setting!
dfch132 May 2024
At this stage I don't think Jokan has anything to prove to anyone anymore regarding his directing chops. The cinematography was beautiful, with so many easter eggs in regards to choice of color & tone and did I mention about the sound design? Oh my, 1 of the main reasons why you should experience this in a theater setting! All the eerie sounds surrounding you from every direction it's almost as if you were there in the movie yourself.

Though the story was a little but confusing, being a Jokan movie it successfully managed to spark many fan theories & discussions which I thoroughly enjoy. And as for the acting, with such star studded ensemble cast, I don't think we have anything to worry about.
1 out of 1 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
4/10
An ambitious puzzle that doesn't quite fit together
beemedialtd11 April 2024
Warning: Spoilers
Caught the first showing of Joko Anwar's 10th movie this morning, and it was a bit of a head-scratcher. Going in, I had high hopes - it's Joko Anwar, after all. But coming out, I felt like I had missed a couple of episodes in a series. The story was all over the place, jumping from one plot point to another without much to tie them together.

There was this bit with a guy with the cassette and the reason why he did THAT activity, which just ended in a way that made me go, "Huh?". The guy's motive was counterintuitive to the whole concept of "Grave Torture". Then it leaped forward in time, showing two of the characters all grown up with little explanation of how they got there. The exposition was done only through dialogue. Perhaps some parts of the movie got chopped (thanks, KPI?), leaving us with the skeleton of what could've been a decent story.

Some scenes felt totally random, adding nothing to the story or character development. Like, there was a random "zombie" attack, and I just sat there wondering when we were going to circle back to that (spoiler: we didn't). It tried to get all deep and twisty with a dream-within-a-dream vibe, hinting that maybe everything was a hallucination, but it fell flat. Especially with a bizarre satanic ritual thrown in that countered the whole Islamic ritual to prevent grave torture.

The whole thing could've used a clear visual marker, something to show us what's real or not - kinda like the totem in Nolan's Inception. Without it, the movie was just one big, confusing trip that didn't feel as smart as it thinks it is.

In short, it was Joko Anwar trying something new with twisty psychedelic layers. But it didn't quite hit the mark this time. I left the cinema feeling more puzzled than entertained as my wife and I discussed it throughout our lunchtime and our drive back home.
17 out of 28 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
10/10
Greatest horror movie in indonesian cinema
newjosslarson23 April 2024
Warning: Spoilers
This is one of the scariest Joko Anwar films The cinematography, sound, dialogue, and scares are so amazing even for a director like Joko Anwar.

I like how the film mentions the short film of Siksa Kubur saying that the Terrorist bomber is the same boy in the short film I mean look at the face they look similar not to mention they use the original short film torture sounds not to mention that Pengabdi Setan is also in Siksa Kubur Universe sharing a universe of the mind of Joko Anwar.

I like how this differentiates other horror movie tropes not just vengeful ghosts, and curses None of that This movie takes its own original story mixes of different horror movies this is what happens if you put all horror movie subgenres into one horror movie.
0 out of 0 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
10/10
Siksa Kubur: A Masterful Lovecraftian Horror Cloaked in 1980s Indonesia
leong-560579 May 2024
Siksa Kubur is a remarkable film that stands as a true Lovecraftian classic, cloaked in the guise of 1980s Indonesia. The story begins with a logical and captivating female protagonist who grows suspicious of the existence of chaotic, ancient beings linked to an unnamed religion. As the plot unfolds, it spirals into an otherworldly Lovecraftian nightmare, unleashing chaos that distorts reality and drives the protagonist and those around her into utter insanity.

The journey through horror is an experience not to be missed. This is precisely how a Cthulhu-inspired horror film should be crafted, capturing genuine fear at its core. Lovecraftian cinema delves into our deepest anxieties, and Siksa Kubur masterfully embodies this, making its portrayal of ancient, unnamed gods both relatable and terrifyingly real.
0 out of 0 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
2/10
Huge Disappointment!!! 2/10 (Spoiler)
fadilmarthias13 April 2024
Warning: Spoilers
This one sucks, big time. Such waste of time.

We want more grave torture related scenes!!! The title is Siksa Kubur (grave torture). Thus, it's such huge disappointment that the grave torture scene only shows up at the end of the movie!!! It's like only 2% of the entire movie!!!

Lame and slow story build up also!!! Many irrelevant + unnecessary scenes. For example, what the hell Ishmael has anything to do with grave torturing activities. Why does Ishmael keep occuring? Can't relate at all the importance of Ishmael for this movie.

The reason for the suicide bombing is also absurd. Christine Hakim's husbands unfaithful scenes also do not any value at all to the movie.
8 out of 15 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
5/10
Both Upgrade and Downgrade (Mild Spoiler)
furunama15 April 2024
Warning: Spoilers
The short film "Grave Torture" captivated audiences with its intriguing premise. However, the execution faltered due to a rushed plot and an unsatisfying conclusion. The subsequent feature-length adaptation promised to address these shortcomings. It aimed to establish deeper character connections, provide a more credible foundation for the narrative, and significantly expand upon the torment central to the title.

While the feature film delivers some improvements, they remain largely superficial. The "torture" sequences, while undeniably more intense, are confined to the film's climax. A more thorough exploration of this thematic element throughout the narrative would have been a welcome addition.

The protagonist's backstory, absent from the short film, offers a much-needed explanation for their actions. However, the catalyst for their obsession - a remark from a dubious source - lacks narrative weight. A more compelling reason for their pursuit of the truth surrounding grave torture would have strengthened the film's thematic core.

The introduction of a "walking zombie" or haunting figure feels extraneous. While its purpose may be to bridge the narrative gap leading to the conclusion, it lacks a clear connection to the central theme and functions primarily as filler.

On a technical note, the sound design excels in creating atmosphere. However, instances of obscured dialogue necessitate the recommendation of subtitles for viewers with auditory processing difficulties.

In conclusion, the feature-length "Grave Torture" represents a missed opportunity. While it offers some improvements upon the source material, these revisions remain surface-level. A more focused exploration of the thematic core, a stronger narrative foundation, and a tighter overall structure could have elevated this film to a far greater level.
2 out of 4 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink

See also

Awards | FAQ | User Ratings | External Reviews | Metacritic Reviews


Recently Viewed