Adapted from Colombian writer Laura Restrepo’s novel of the same name, Netflix’s eight-episode miniseries, Delirium, explores themes of ambition, family ties, love, and repression of identity and sexuality by focusing on the dysfunctional Londono family in the backdrop of the 80s mob-afflicted Colombian city of Bogota. While the story itself is rather simple, the non-linear approach of jumbling different timelines spanning over three generations might feel a bit confusing to the viewers to keep track of events. While Delirium tries to touch on a number of topics using the lead, Agustina Londono’s psychological degradation and eventual recovery, the final resolution might not gel with all the viewers.
Spoilers Ahead
Agustina’s Marriage With Aguilar
Left-leaning professor of literature at Bogota’s Public University, Fernando Aguilar is popular among students for his liberal ideologies and constant support for their ongoing protest against corruption in the academic field. A middle-aged man in his 50s,...
Spoilers Ahead
Agustina’s Marriage With Aguilar
Left-leaning professor of literature at Bogota’s Public University, Fernando Aguilar is popular among students for his liberal ideologies and constant support for their ongoing protest against corruption in the academic field. A middle-aged man in his 50s,...
- 19.7.2025
- von Siddhartha Das
- Film Fugitives
Netflix’s Colombian drama series Delirium revolves around Agustina and her troubled past that her husband, Aguilar, must uncover to fully grasp the reason behind her delirium. Aguilar was a professor at a public college and the driving force behind students’ protest when he crossed paths with Agustina, a dreamy young girl who offered tarot readings at the demonstration sites. There was something about Agustina that immediately attracted Aguilar, and even though she’d warned him that there would be days when she might just disappear and not be her usual self, he chose to be by her side. But things soon got complicated when one day Aguilar received a call from a hotel asking him to take home his wife. How did Agustina end up there? Who was the random stranger who was with Agustina when Aguilar arrived? Let’s find out.
Spoiler Alert
Was Agustina a victim of generational trauma?...
Spoiler Alert
Was Agustina a victim of generational trauma?...
- 18.7.2025
- von Srijoni Rudra
- DMT
The best jump scare movies are the ones that have little going on in the frame for most of the time, allowing the viewer to effectively scare themselves with the power of their imagination. But this doesn't mean that the art of the jump scare is beneath great filmmakers quite the opposite. The best jump scare movies demonstrate that horror masters throughout cinematic history have used the jump as a powerful tool to pull the audience deeper into their terrifying worlds, and while there are often cheap scares, the best ones are the scares that really take viewers by surprise.
The best jump scare movies are the ones that don't feel cheap to the audience, building up each scenario carefully and methodically over long periods of time to earn the scare. Finding these horror movies on platforms like Netflix is not an easy task, as it requires the film to...
The best jump scare movies are the ones that don't feel cheap to the audience, building up each scenario carefully and methodically over long periods of time to earn the scare. Finding these horror movies on platforms like Netflix is not an easy task, as it requires the film to...
- 3.10.2024
- von Dena Daw, Colin McCormick
- ScreenRant
It’s time for a new episode of our Best Foreign Horror Movies video series, and in this one we’re looking back at the 2007 Spanish production [Rec] (watch it Here), directed by Jaume Balagueró and Paco Plaza. To find out what we had to say about [Rec], check out the video embedded above!
Balagueró and Plaza wrote [Rec] with Luis A. Berdejo, crafting the following story:
A young TV reporter and her cameraman cover the night shift at the local fire station. Receiving a call from an old lady trapped in her house, they reach her building to hear horrifying screams – which begins a long nightmare and a uniquely dramatic TV report.
The film stars Manuela Velasco, Ferrán Terraza, Jorge-Yamam Serrano, Pablo Rosso, David Vert, Vicente Gil, Martha Carbonell, Carlos Vicente, Carlos Lasarte, María Lanau, Claudia Silva, Akemi Goto, Chen Min Kao, María Teresa Ortega, Manuel Bronchud, Ben Temple, Ana Velasquez, Daniel Trinh,...
Balagueró and Plaza wrote [Rec] with Luis A. Berdejo, crafting the following story:
A young TV reporter and her cameraman cover the night shift at the local fire station. Receiving a call from an old lady trapped in her house, they reach her building to hear horrifying screams – which begins a long nightmare and a uniquely dramatic TV report.
The film stars Manuela Velasco, Ferrán Terraza, Jorge-Yamam Serrano, Pablo Rosso, David Vert, Vicente Gil, Martha Carbonell, Carlos Vicente, Carlos Lasarte, María Lanau, Claudia Silva, Akemi Goto, Chen Min Kao, María Teresa Ortega, Manuel Bronchud, Ben Temple, Ana Velasquez, Daniel Trinh,...
- 25.8.2022
- von Cody Hamman
- JoBlo.com
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