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H6: Diario de un asesino

  • 2005
  • Not Rated
  • 1h 32m
IMDb RATING
4.6/10
1.1K
YOUR RATING
H6: Diario de un asesino (2005)
CrimeHorrorThriller

Antonio Frau is a formerly convicted killer who, while having an active sex life with his buxom wife Francisca who also cheats on him with her older doctor, becomes a serial killer/rapist of... Read allAntonio Frau is a formerly convicted killer who, while having an active sex life with his buxom wife Francisca who also cheats on him with her older doctor, becomes a serial killer/rapist of women.Antonio Frau is a formerly convicted killer who, while having an active sex life with his buxom wife Francisca who also cheats on him with her older doctor, becomes a serial killer/rapist of women.

  • Director
    • Martín Garrido Barón
  • Writer
    • Martín Garrido Ramis
  • Stars
    • Fernando Acaso
    • María José Bausá
    • Raquel Arenas
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    4.6/10
    1.1K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Martín Garrido Barón
    • Writer
      • Martín Garrido Ramis
    • Stars
      • Fernando Acaso
      • María José Bausá
      • Raquel Arenas
    • 20User reviews
    • 30Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos1

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    Top cast16

    Edit
    Fernando Acaso
    • Antonio Frau
    María José Bausá
    • Francisca Seguí
    Raquel Arenas
    • Rosa
    Xènia Reguant
    • Marisa
    Sonia Moreno
    • Tina
    Alejo Sauras
    Alejo Sauras
    • Cristóbal
    Martín Garrido Ramis
    • Miguel Oliver Escanellas
    • (as Martín Garrido)
    Mark San Juan
    • Peralta
    Miquel Sitjar
    • Flores
    Ruperto Ares
    • Pablo
    Ramón G. del Pomar
    • Curro
    • (as Ramón Del Pomar)
    Elena Seguí
    • Soledad Méndez
    Miquel Fernández
    Miquel Fernández
    • Antonio Frau 25
    Ángel Alarcón
    • Francisca's Father
    Antonio Mayans
    Antonio Mayans
    • Dr. Planas
    Gonzalo Bouza
    Gonzalo Bouza
    • Policeman
    • Director
      • Martín Garrido Barón
    • Writer
      • Martín Garrido Ramis
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews20

    4.61.1K
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    Featured reviews

    6Coventry

    Clean towels! We need clean towels, room 6.

    With all the promising reviews warning about the morbidity & intense shock-value of this film, and especially with knowing what formed basic inspiration for the story , I can't help admitting I was a little disappointed after my viewing of "H6: Diary of a Serial Killer". Sure this Spanish effort is remotely gruesome and confronting, but not nearly as much as I expected (or hoped) and there are far more dull moments than shocking ones. As for the inspiration, the script (and even the main character Antonio Frau himself) often refers to Henri Landru. Landru was a French serial killer who murdered nearly a dozen of women during the years of World War one and carefully noted down his grim actions in a diary that eventually proved his guilt. Landru selected his victims randomly and killed without apparent motives, and maybe the character of Antonio Frau could have used a bit more sense of nihilism like that as well. His seemingly forced motives for killing young girls are (partly) what makes the film so implausible. Once freed from jail, where he did 15 years for murdering his girlfriend when he was a teenager, Antonio inherits an old and ramshackle motel in the middle of a prostitute-infested neighborhood. With his new wife working night shifts at the hospital, Antonio has plenty of free time to fulfill his new mission in life, namely the purification of sinners. He lures drug-addicted prostitutes to his motel and locks them up in room 6, where he rapes, humiliates and tortures them (talk about 'cleansing') before practicing his chainsaw dismembering skills on their scarcely dressed bodies. Antonio's modus operandi and motivations don't make the least bit of sense, but they do result in several nauseating and blood-soaked sequences. Totally gratuitous footage, of course, but suitably sadistic if you're interested in this type of cinema. But, like I mentioned before already, the film badly suffers from too many tedious moments as well. Antonio Frau really talks too much and insists on narrating all the things he writes down in his precious diary. Near the end of the movie and totally out of the blue, the script suddenly turns ambitious and actually attempts to make us believe the protagonist is a criminal mastermind, even more intelligent than the Jigsaw Killer or even Hannibal Lector. Yeah right. "H6: Diary of a Serial Killer" is nicely shot and benefices from macabre settings and a thoroughly grim ambiance. Fernando Acaso is fairly convincing as the twisted killer (at least during the first half of the film), Mariá José Bausá is bewitching as his voluptuous wife and Antonio Mayans (a Jess Franco regular!) makes a brief appearance as her lover. "H6" isn't nearly as sick and repulsive as some people claim, but nonetheless an interesting movie for Euro-horror fanatics to check out.
    3kosmasp

    Hello Woman!

    The name (Frau) of the main character is the German word for "Woman". I don't know if that was intentional or not, but if sure got some giggles from the German audience at the Fantasy Film Festival last year, when it was shown.

    But those were the only giggles the movie got. Not that it was aiming for giggles, it's a horrible movie for heaven's sake! A horrible movie in more than one meaning. It's a shame that a premise like that was wasted with horrible even unbearable moments for the viewer (definetely not for the faint of Heart!!)! And it wasn't even necessary to show all the things that are shown. I'm not even going into a moral obligation (because movies don't really have that kind of task or function) discussion of what is shown here, but this is a new low on the whole "torture movement" that has grown in the last few years!
    5Chris_Docker

    The sort of thing for an all-night horror fest

    H6 - Diary of an Assassin opens with a dark screen. A domestic argument can be heard. Spilling out of the darkness of an apartment into murky, ochre light we see a man abusing and eventually throttling his wife. Hello Antonio Frau, before he learns the self-control needed to become a serious serial killer.

    Several years later and he's out of prison, inheriting an old empty building that used to be a brothel. He also picks up a wife, who has corresponded with him in the nick and believes he has reformed. He has. Gone is the anger, the violent reactiveness to situations he can't control. He now has a finely honed mind, free of any non-psychopathic tendencies, and explains to the audience his new calling as a serial killer. He obligingly plans a diary that will include before-and-after Polaroid pictures - for posterity, you understand. We survey his collection of chain saws and other necessary equipment.

    The portrait of an unemotional but ruthlessly clinical and intelligent killer hearkens to many movies of this ilk, or popular fiction such as We Must Talk About Kevin. It is not particularly new, but there is always room for a new approach and I was interested to see how the cinematography tackled the subject, whether the scenes of gore would be particularly extreme censor-bait, memorably artistic, or whether it would develop new psychological twists.

    Intellectually, the film is fairly shallow, but could still appeal to gore-buffs. Antonio Frau's main raison d'etre is the old 'cleanse humanity of the scum' motive - rounding up prostitutes and other undesirables and purge them with pain before ridding humanity of their presence (all in the name of the Lord). The psychology mirrors the witchfinders of Roman Catholicism, aided and abetted then by a string of ingenious torturers, sexual perverts and willing official and non-official helpers. That age having passed (or at least transformed - the Church no longer having such power in modern day Spain), poor Antonio has to shoulder the divine burden all himself. "The Lord has chosen me for this very special task," he proclaims. The similarity, and the fact that Church brutality against 'witches' was mirrored on Old Testament torture, raises the question of copycat violence for the weak minded.

    Antonio's preferred method is to seem kind and generous until he has his victims in his grasp. He has a special room in the old lodging house with a table where he binds women of the night spread-eagled (usually he feeds them first and explains his special sexual needs, offering lots of dosh). Once they are tied up, he rapes them repeatedly, starves them for days, and then (for the good of their soul) hacks them into bits and puts the body parts in black bin bags.

    For its economy of images, most of which are above-average though not quite outstanding, H6 - Diary of an Assassin deserves some credit. One of the victims puts in a remarkably good performance as she is raped - the expressions on her face are horrifying. But the film falls short of even its own modest ambition. The camera looks away as limbs are hacked off, and the blood spurts look a little repetitive from one dismemberment to the next. Even more worrying in terms of continuity is the explicit camera shots between the girls' legs that always show neatly arranged panties even as Antonio dismounts.

    This film will be offensive to many people for the subject matter. For some horror buffs it will, ironically, be lacking in sufficient realism, at least by today's film-making standards, but there is enough to slake the blood-thirst of most fans of the genre. Others should probably stay away.
    5ma-cortes

    Claustrophobic and eerie film with a lot of grisly murders committed in an old lodging house

    I deals with Antonio Frau : Fernando Acaso, a criminal who after 25 years in prison for killing his fiancee, he is then freed. Later on , a public notary tells him he has inherited an old boarding house from an unknown aunt. At the room number 6, of his motel he carries out grisly activities, by coping his admired French killer "Landru" and using a chainsaw , too. Meantime , he marries a nurse woman called Francisca : Maria José Bausa who deceives him with a doctor : Antonio Mayans , and both of whom live at the motel, going on their ordinary marriage life while Frau executes astonishing slaughter . Along the way he writes his self-biography and diary, detailing his ominous and dark exploits. Come in, dont be afraid.

    Terrifying films with brief elements of black humor about murders with a series killer proceeding a criminal spree, about 18 victims cutting them in piezes, usually prostitutes, including lots of intercourses, gore and blood . A little known cast as Fernando Acaso playing a formerly convicted murderer who in freedom becomes a series killer as well as a women rapist. His wife is played by Maria Jose Bousa, in her only film, as a nurse who cheats him with her older doctor and she isn't aware his sinister activities. An un unknown support cast exception for short apperances from Alejo Sauras, Miguel Fernandez and Antonio Mayans who was regular actor in Jesus Franco or Uncle Jess films and his usual collaborator.

    The movie contains an atmospheric musical score from Gaby Kemp and Jose Sanz, adding classic music by prestigious composers as Vivaldi : 4 seasons, Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart : Requiem, Johannes Brahms : Concert no 2, Ludwig Van Beethoven : Sonata no 14 Moolight, Giacomo Puccini : Tosca , Frederic Chopin : Valse in Flat Major Minute, among others . The picture was regular but professionally directed by Martin Garrido Baron. He is a multiple artist, as he is actor/producer/photographer/director/composer. He has directed a few films as Vidas Tenebrosas , Nos veremos en infierno, El monstruo, and Mediterranean blue. Rating 5/10. Mediocre but entertaining.
    4jp-campbell

    Sick

    Visually speaking, this film is stunning. It has some delightful black comedic moments. But on the whole, the plot is very clichéd, as is its seeming message. If you're a fan of over-the-top violence in mainstream movies like hostel or saw, you'll love it. If you're looking for something at all high-brow, steer away. I saw it as part of the edinburgh film festival 06, and I only chose it because I was looking for something disturbing. Ultimately, it isn't disturbing. Just grinding and unpleasant to sit through. If you genuinely want to be challenged, go see something like The Lost. If you want to be grossed out, or tell your friends about a really messed up film, then this is for you.

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    Related interests

    James Gandolfini, Edie Falco, Sharon Angela, Max Casella, Dan Grimaldi, Joe Perrino, Donna Pescow, Jamie-Lynn Sigler, Tony Sirico, and Michael Drayer in Les Soprano (1999)
    Crime
    Mia Farrow in Rosemary's Baby (1968)
    Horror
    Cho Yeo-jeong in Parasite (2019)
    Thriller

    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      Selected for the San Sebastian Horror & Fantasy festival 2005
    • Soundtracks
      Ritual
      Written by Patrick Hawes

      Cavendish Music Co. Ltd.

      Multimusic, S.L.

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • July 7, 2006 (Spain)
    • Country of origin
      • Spain
    • Language
      • Spanish
    • Also known as
      • H6: Diary of a Serial Killer
    • Filming locations
      • Madrid, Spain
    • Production company
      • Kanzaman
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Budget
      • €1,200,000 (estimated)
    • Gross worldwide
      • $138,059
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      • 1h 32m(92 min)
    • Color
      • Color

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