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The Song of Scorpions

  • 2017
  • 1h 59m
IMDb RATING
6.0/10
716
YOUR RATING
Golshifteh Farahani and Irrfan Khan in The Song of Scorpions (2017)
Aadam, a camel trader fell in love with Nooran, a tribal woman. But even before they can get to know each other better, Nooran is poisoned by a treachery that sets her on a perilous journey to avenge herself and find her song.
Play trailer1:41
1 Video
21 Photos
Drama

Aadam, a camel trader fell in love with Nooran, a tribal woman. But even before they can get to know each other better, Nooran is poisoned by a treachery that sets her on a perilous journey ... Read allAadam, a camel trader fell in love with Nooran, a tribal woman. But even before they can get to know each other better, Nooran is poisoned by a treachery that sets her on a perilous journey to avenge herself and find her song.Aadam, a camel trader fell in love with Nooran, a tribal woman. But even before they can get to know each other better, Nooran is poisoned by a treachery that sets her on a perilous journey to avenge herself and find her song.

  • Director
    • Anup Singh
  • Writers
    • Juhi Chaturvedi
    • Anup Singh
  • Stars
    • Golshifteh Farahani
    • Irrfan Khan
    • Waheeda Rehman
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.0/10
    716
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Anup Singh
    • Writers
      • Juhi Chaturvedi
      • Anup Singh
    • Stars
      • Golshifteh Farahani
      • Irrfan Khan
      • Waheeda Rehman
    • 9User reviews
    • 18Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 1 nomination total

    Videos1

    Official Trailer [eng sub]
    Trailer 1:41
    Official Trailer [eng sub]

    Photos21

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    Top cast9

    Edit
    Golshifteh Farahani
    Golshifteh Farahani
    • Nooran
    Irrfan Khan
    Irrfan Khan
    • Aadam
    Waheeda Rehman
    Waheeda Rehman
    • Zubaida
    Shashank Arora
    Shashank Arora
    • Muna
    Tillotama Shome
    Tillotama Shome
    • Lady of the Night
    Sara Arjun
    Sara Arjun
    • Ayeesha
    Shefali Bhushan
    Shefali Bhushan
    • Shakila
    Kritika Pande
    • Amina
    Garima Pareek
    • Dhaba Girl
    • Director
      • Anup Singh
    • Writers
      • Juhi Chaturvedi
      • Anup Singh
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews9

    6.0716
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    Featured reviews

    10khushboochadha

    Beautiful experience

    It's a Beautiful movie. Amazing work done by actors. Greatly showcased the beauty as well as dangers of desert.
    7sarthakbharad2926

    I don't know...

    I feel like I might appreciate this film more on subsequent watches but for now, I think I'll go with the 7 stars rating. This isn't a bad film persay, but my viewing experience was a bit convoluted. To sum it up, make sure there are subtitles because you will miss out on important bits (one being a huge plot point which is essentially what drives the third act forward) and make sure to keep the brightness on max and no lights are lit because there are many, many night shots which are barely visible even if a little light is present.

    The story of Nooran finding her lost song could've been quite a character-study but it transcends to something much more niche and something which may or may not connect with you. It almost connected with me until it didn't. I can't really explain what went wrong because it feels too convoluted and self-indulgent and I'll just leave that to you to decide. I was very confused as to where the third act goes as the payoff that was setup at the end of first act doesn't really seem like one. The end to this story (judging it for what it is and not for what I was expecting it to be) should feel very powerful and moving rather, it feels unearned and somewhat on the ambiguous side with much left for the viewer to decode. I love ambiguity, I really do but a filmmaker should atleast be competent enough to understand what a viewer might and might not understand. I feel like a dumbass who didn't understand the end but what I'm trying to say is, the ending could've felt a bit more earned and satisfying than it actually is.

    The film very heavily utilizes the marwadi accent with it's characters and while Irrfan quite smoothly slides into his character, Golshifteh Farahani's dialect was more of that of an actor trying their best. This doesn't mean that Golshifteh's performance is awful, on the contrary, I connected with her the most since this is her story and Director Anup Singh does manage that quite firmly. The performances are all excellent. Irrfan as always is great, Golshifteh as the lead is quite the empathatic presence and you develop a significant amount of care for her throughout the film but, it was Waheeda Rehman who in particular stood out to me. She plays the role of Nooran's mother and although her presence is brief, she never feels out of place and works quite well in service for the story.

    The songs and cinematography are also great. The folk marwadi songs were a somber tune for the ears and the cinematography is just beautiful. This film is absolutely ravishing to look at. DOP Pietro Zuercher takes Anup's vision a step ahead. It's almost on the same level as Greig Fraser marinated the dark and broody tones of Gotham with hints of shades of black in The Batman, The Song Of Scorpions follows the same visuals but the setup now moves to a desert. Costume design by Divya and Nidhi Gambhir, art direction by Mayur Mulam and Production design by Rajesh Yadav are authentic and near to perfection.
    7sureshrattan

    Intelligent viewing

    Great camera work, wonderful desert, complex psychology of love, possession, shame, control, freedom, choice, revenge, regret - all are there. Lots of metaphors - the song, the scorpion, the desert all of them. A timeless, slow moving story in a timeless setting in modern times. The film trusts and demands its viewers to be able to read and to be intelligent observers of symbols.
    6dy38493

    Good movie from irrfan

    Good movie to watch for especially the locations of rajasthan and also great acting from irrfan the movie is good.
    6SAMTHEBESTEST

    Legendary Irrfan Khan's Last Release Stings More Poison Than Scorpion

    The Song Of Scorpion (2023) : Movie Review -

    Irrfan Khan's final release, "The Songs Of Scorpion," is a Swiss-French-Singaporean Rajasthani drama, written and directed by Anup Singh. We have come through the ages of Ingemar Bergman and Satyajit Ray, who redefined artistic and realistic cinema in their times. If you are of the same opinion as me that we are missing that kind of cinema nowadays, then The Songs of Scorpion might come as a nice break for you. This artistic film works like a slow poison that won't kill you but will definitely kill the dead cinema lover in you since we are all living in the era of mindless commercial entertainers (that's why it's called "Dead"). It's a bit complicated and lengthy, but it's up to you to judge whether it's worth it or not. As I believe, you'll have your own theories and explanations for this mic-drop burn. I would have preferred a better ending with instant effects, but otherwise, there are no complaints. The Song Of Scorpion has enough poison to sting you.

    The film is set in a mythological period when Scorpion's sting could kill a man within 24 hours in the desert of Jaisalmer. Nooran (Golshifteh Farahani), a tribal woman, is taking lessons from her grandmother, Zubaida (Waheeda Rehman), to become a scorpion singer like her, who can cure people stung by scorpions. After a tragic event and the disappearance of her grandmother, the happy-go-lucky Nooran is lost. She moves out with Aadam (Irrfan Khan) to start a new life. However, the hidden past comes back to haunt her and reveals many shocking facts that lead her down a new path of revenge. What's in that past and how Nooran fixes her revenge and redemption are all that form the crux of the story.

    Written by Anup Singh, The Song Of Scorpion is an intense affair with a narrow appeal. The audience for this kind of intellectual and realistic film is pretty small. But the film is a bit more complex for that audience too. Also, the language is a bit intricate to understand without the subtitles. One of the most important scenes isn't audible enough. That's irresponsible. Talking of the positives, it's a well-written script with an intensive screenplay that doesn't bore you despite leisurely storytelling. You can enjoy the pauses and slow walks as the cinematographer gives enough attention to the location and takes your eyes at work. The folklore and mythological references will take you into a culturally rich and significant zone that you hardly see in today's social media era.

    The legendary Irrfan Khan sir is pure magic. The first human frame in the film has Irrfan sir's close-up shot, and you are like, "That's it. I have seen everything now". That seemed like an additional frame, but the impact is harder since the legendary artist is no longer with us. The nostalgia reaches its peak there. Watch him in those long cuts, close-ups, widened frames, and that accent; everything is so perfect about him. This film is more about Golshifteh Farahani than Irrfan Sir. The sooner you digest this fact, the better for you. I am not sure what's more difficult. Her name is Golshifteh, or her character. I guess it's the character. I haven't seen any actress playing such a village woman with so much accuracy since Radhika Apte in "Parched" (2016). What a remarkable performance Farahani has delivered, and that too in front of Irrfan Khan Sir. A big salute to her. The legendary Waheeda Rehman disappears sooner than expected but sells enough goods before closing the shop. The latest sensation, Shashank Arora, is fine yet again, and that's no surprise. He gets into the skin of the character, and it's not the first time I'm saying this. The supporting cast has also done well.

    The Song Of Scorpion is about setting the right environment from the first frame itself. Who would be interested in seeing panoramas of the desert and listening to folk songs in 2023? But what if I tell you that you'll like both things in this film without even recognising that you are in their world for two hours? I generally get bored of slow films if they don't spill enough material, and also because I watch so many movies on mobile, where fast forwarding is more useful. I didn't have the FF key in the cinema hall, but I didn't need any. The film has a certain pace and certain momentum that keep you interested for two hours with its spellbound world of songs, deserts, scorpions, and humanly believable myths. The cinematography is top-notch, as is the background score. Watch out for those extreme close-up shots when Irrfan and Golshifteh share the one and only intimate scene in the film. Anup Singh is neither Satyajit Ray nor Bergman, but he borrowed enough from their cinema and their styles to set up a whole new style of his own. If it hadn't been for a stretched climax, The Song Of Scorpion would have been a classic for me. But for now, it's a brave attempt at discovering old, well-known new-wave cinema for modern moviegoers.

    RATING - 6/10*

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      The film premiered in Switzerland at the Locarno Film Festival 2017.
    • Soundtracks
      Bijuriya
      Written by Madan Gopal Singh

      Music by Madan Gopal Singh

      Performed by Bindhumalini & Waheeda Rehman

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    FAQ15

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • April 28, 2023 (India)
    • Countries of origin
      • Switzerland
      • France
      • India
    • Official sites
      • Official website
      • Production company
    • Language
      • Hindi
    • Also known as
      • Песнь скорпионов
    • Filming locations
      • Jaisalmer, Rajasthan, India(Thar Desert)
    • Production companies
      • Feather Light Films Sàrl
      • Cine Sud Productions
      • Feather Light Films Sàrl
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Gross worldwide
      • $4,470
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      1 hour 59 minutes
    • Color
      • Color

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