قیصر
A young man's drive to avenge for his sister and brother.
A young man's drive to avenge for his sister and brother.
Behrouz Vossoughi
Gheisar
Pouri Banaei
Azam
Naser Malek Motiee
Farman
جمشید مشایخی
Gheisar's Uncle
Iran Daftari
Gheisar's Mother
Hassan Shahin
Karim Ab-Mangol
Bahman Mofid
Mehdi
Mir Mohammad Tajaddod
Abbas
Jalal Pishvaian
Mansour Ab-Mangol
A young man's drive to avenge for his sister and brother.
Film Review: Gheysar (1969) – The Birth of Iranian Cinema’s Tough Guy Revolution A Nostalgic Journey: Gheysar on a Snowy Day in 1969 It was December 1969, a snowy day in Tehran, and instead of joining the masses for last-minute New Year shopping, I found myself at the cinema. The theater was nearly empty that afternoon—clearly, people had other priorities—but I was there, ready to be immersed in Gheysar. And oh, how astonished I was. Breathtaking Performance and Haunting Music Behrouz Vossoughi's performance left me speechless. His portrayal of Gheysar was raw, intense, and unforgettable. Coupled with the haunting score that seemed to linger in the air, I didn’t want to leave the theater. It was the kind of film that made you want to sit in your seat long after the credits rolled, just absorbing the experience. The Film’s Rise in Popularity Two weeks later, Gheysar was back in theaters, but this time with a much different scene. The longest line I had ever seen for a movie formed outside the ticket booth. The word had spread, and the film became a sensation. I, of course, watched it three more times because, well, there was no VHS, no streaming, nothing but the memory of those black-and-white images to hold on to. The Legacy Lives On Fast forward to 2024, and Gheysar still holds its place as one of the most iconic films in Iranian cinema. The team behind this masterpiece delivered a performance that has stood the test of time, and even today, I can still recall every detail of that snowy December afternoon. Before Gheysar, Iranian cinema had a pretty predictable flavor. It was all sunshine, songs, and moral lessons wrapped in neat little bows—more or less feel-good films with a focus on family values, traditional narratives, and happy endings. And then along came Gheysar, flipping the entire script and kicking off what could be called the "Before Gheysar" and "After Gheysar" era of Iranian cinema. Directed by Masoud Kimiai, Gheysar was a seismic shift. This movie didn’t show a hero who politely asked society to play fair. Nope. It showcased a man who, after his family is torn apart by violence and dishonor, decides that law and order are not delivering. So, he takes justice into his own hands with all the silent rage of a ticking time bomb. This was not your typical Iranian film hero—Gheysar was raw, dark, and determined, and suddenly, Iranian cinema had discovered the anti-hero. Before Gheysar – The World of Cheerful Morality Tales The Iranian film industry pre-Gheysar had a certain formula: melodramas, musicals, and feel-good movies that stayed within the bounds of traditional values. You had clean-cut protagonists who wouldn’t dare challenge societal norms—think a family-friendly hero who faced adversity with a smile. Sure, there was drama, but it was drama with a cushion. Everything wrapped up with life lessons, and a side of tea and cookies, of course. After Gheysar – Enter the Grit Then Gheysar came along, and suddenly, Iranian cinema had grit. It was a brutal wake-up call to the industry, as the film ditched the moral niceties for something far more primal: revenge. This film introduced a hero who wasn’t waiting around for the police or the courts to give him justice. Gheysar embodied a new kind of man—flawed, determined, and entirely unapologetic about the fact that sometimes you just need to do what needs to be done, no matter the consequences. The audience loved it. Gheysar captured the spirit of a society that felt increasingly disillusioned with old structures and wanted something more visceral. It was the cinematic equivalent of a middle finger to the old ways, and it resonated deeply with people who were tired of films that ignored the harsher realities of life. Changing the Game – From Pretty to Gritty What Gheysar did for Iranian cinema was seismic. It made room for darker, more complex characters and stories, ones that weren’t afraid to portray violence, vengeance, and moral ambiguity. No longer were heroes expected to be shining examples of virtue. They could be broken, vengeful, and conflicted—and audiences still rooted for them. This film birthed a new era where gritty realism took center stage. Suddenly, filmmakers weren’t afraid to tackle social issues head-on, and Gheysar became the blueprint for a wave of films that were edgier, darker, and far more emotionally intense. It wasn’t just about entertainment anymore—it was about challenging norms and pushing boundaries. Iranian filmmakers began exploring the depth of human emotion, societal injustice, and personal redemption. The Legacy of Gheysar The legacy of Gheysar goes beyond its revenge plot. It fundamentally changed the trajectory of Iranian cinema by showing that audiences were hungry for something more substantial. This film opened the floodgates for Iranian directors to experiment with more complex themes, darker characters, and a grittier portrayal of life. It paved the way for filmmakers like Dariush Mehrjui and Abbas Kiarostami to push the boundaries of the art form. In short, Gheysar wasn’t just a movie—it was a cultural moment. It marked the point where Iranian cinema shed its conservative skin and stepped into a bolder, braver future. The divide between the pre-Gheysar and post-Gheysar eras is as stark as Gheysar’s own silent stare before delivering justice: cool, calculated, and a total game-changer. I have watched this old movie at least 20 times. Manour Ansari, Oklahoma City, USA. 2024
When his daughter is murdered, William Duncan takes the law into his own hands, setting out on a quest for retribution. After killing the street thug responsible for her death, he finds himself in the middle of a war with the thug's brother, father, and their gang, who are equally hell-bent on getting even. What ensues is a tense back-and-forth game of vengeance. By the end, William comes to find that the quest for revenge never has a winner.
อดีตนักโทษหญิงได้กลับคืนสู่สังคมที่ไม่มีวันให้อภัยเธอ จึงตัดสินใจออกตามหาน้องสาวที่เคยจำใจทิ้งไว้เบื้องหลัง
เรื่องราวความเจ็บปวดของเหยื่อจากสงครามโลกครั้งที่สอง “มายา” (นูมิ ราเพซ) หญิงสาวผู้เคยตกเป็นเชลยสงครามและสูญเสียน้องสาวไป 15 ปีต่อมาเธอพบว่า “โทมัส” (โจเอล คินนาแมน) เพื่อนบ้านแปลกหน้าที่เพิ่งย้ายเข้ามาใหม่อาจจะเป็นอดีตทหารนาซีที่เคยรุมทำร้ายและสร้างบาดแผลในใจเธอตลอดมา มายาจึงได้วางแผนลักพาตัวและได้ร่วมมือกับสามี “ลิวอิส” (คริส เมสซินา) เพื่อทวงแค้นคืนมาให้สาสม แต่ทุกอย่างกลับไม่เป็นตามที่คิด เมื่อเธอไม่มีหลักฐานมัดตัว มายาจึงต้องปลุกด้านมืดของเธอออกมาเพื่อคาดคั้นความจริงจากปากชายผู้โชคร้ายเพื่อพิสูจน์ความจริงว่าเธอไม่ได้จิตหลอนไปเองฝ่ายเดียว
Brenda, vivacious leader of the "Satins", a fun-loving group of pretty high school girls, searches for deadly vengeance against the gang members who assaulted her deaf-mute sister.
Lucas Frost, an honest man brought up in a crime family whose only legacy is violence, tries to make his own life with his fiancée, Emma. He is suddenly pulled back into the family business he so despises when his cousin, Eli, perpetrates an armed robbery on a local scrap yard and an innocent life is caught in the crossfire.
After being framed for a policeman's murder, a criminal escapes prison and sets out for revenge.
It's fire and brimstone time as grieving mother Karen McCann takes justice into her own hands when a kangaroo court in Los Angeles fails to convict Robert Doob, the monster who raped and murdered her 17-year-old daughter.
ชอว์ คือตำรวจที่กลับมาปฎิบัติหน้าที่หลังจากฟื้นตัวจากอาการบาดเจ็บ เขาได้ค้นพบหลักฐานของกิจกรรมที่ผิดกฎหมายต่อบรรดาผู้ใกล้ชิดในองค์กรของเขา เขาเร่งค้นหาด้วยตัวเอง เมื่อบรรดาเพื่อนเขารู้ว่า ชอว์ เข้ามายุ่งกับเรื่องของพวกเขา จึงเกิดการไล่ล่าเพื่อจะเอาหลักฐานสำคัญจาก ชอว์ ให้ได้ แม้ต้องแลกด้วยชีวิต!!
Upon waking up to the news that the man she’d gone on a date with the previous night has been murdered, a young woman with only a faint memory of the night’s events begins to suspect that she murdered him while attempting to resist his advances.
Unable to move on from the loss of his daughter, Freddy, now a shell of the person he was before, swears to kill the man responsible for her death.