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Huesera

  • 2022
  • Not Rated
  • 1h 37m
IMDb RATING
6.0/10
7.1K
YOUR RATING
Huesera (2022)
Valeria has long dreamed about becoming a mother. After learning that she's pregnant, she expects to feel happy, yet something's off.
Play trailer1:28
2 Videos
25 Photos
Body HorrorFolk HorrorDramaHorror

Valeria has long dreamed about becoming a mother. After learning that she's pregnant, she expects to feel happy, yet something's off.Valeria has long dreamed about becoming a mother. After learning that she's pregnant, she expects to feel happy, yet something's off.Valeria has long dreamed about becoming a mother. After learning that she's pregnant, she expects to feel happy, yet something's off.

  • Director
    • Michelle Garza Cervera
  • Writers
    • Michelle Garza Cervera
    • Abia Castillo
  • Stars
    • Natalia Solián
    • Alfonso Dosal
    • Mayra Batalla
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.0/10
    7.1K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Michelle Garza Cervera
    • Writers
      • Michelle Garza Cervera
      • Abia Castillo
    • Stars
      • Natalia Solián
      • Alfonso Dosal
      • Mayra Batalla
    • 44User reviews
    • 89Critic reviews
    • 81Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 13 wins & 31 nominations total

    Videos2

    Trailer
    Trailer 1:28
    Trailer
    Huesera: The Bone Woman
    Trailer 1:30
    Huesera: The Bone Woman
    Huesera: The Bone Woman
    Trailer 1:30
    Huesera: The Bone Woman

    Photos24

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    Top cast50

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    Natalia Solián
    Natalia Solián
    • Valeria
    Alfonso Dosal
    Alfonso Dosal
    • Raúl
    Mayra Batalla
    Mayra Batalla
    • Octavia
    Mercedes Hernández
    Mercedes Hernández
    • Isabel
    Sonia Couoh
    Sonia Couoh
    • Vero
    Aida López
    Aida López
    • Maricarmen
    Anahí Allué
    • Norma
    Martha Claudia Moreno
    • Ursula
    Emilram Cossío
    • Gynecologist
    Norma Reyna
    • Sabine Woman
    Gina Morett
    Gina Morett
    • Sabine Woman
    Rocío Belmont
    • Sabine Woman
    Camila Leoneé
    • Paola
    Luciano Martí
    • Jorge
    Enoc Leaño
    Enoc Leaño
    • Luis
    Laura de Ita
    Laura de Ita
    • Marina
    Carlos Orozco Plascencia
    • Victor
    • (as Carlos Orozco)
    Gabriela Velarde
    • Valeria in Flashback
    • Director
      • Michelle Garza Cervera
    • Writers
      • Michelle Garza Cervera
      • Abia Castillo
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews44

    6.07.1K
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    Featured reviews

    7aarpcats

    A Room of Her Own

    In 1929, Virginia Woolf argued that centuries of calcified gender roles and financial disparity had prevented women from realizing their true potential. To become whole, she thought they needed agency, control over their own lives that she expressed in the idea of "a room of her own."

    For Woolf, that room was her own writing garret in a house she shared with her husband. For Valeria, the heroine of this movie, it is the craft room in the apartment she shares with her husband, Raul. That room is where she makes the furniture she sells for a living.

    Valeria's room is the first thing she has to give up when she becomes pregnant. The next is apparently anything she is entitled to say or think about her own body, which is what we see as her husband and family decide what is best for her without even acknowledging that she is in the room. And so develops the theme of the movie.

    Not all women want children. They may love them and want what is best for them, but they know that they don't what to take care of them. They also may not be attracted to or want to love a man.

    The idea of being voluntarily childless and with another is hard enough in the US, but almost impossible in a place like Mexico where gender roles are more deeply defined. Valeria CAN'T be the woman Raul and her family want her to be, even if she wants to be. Her struggle to please them makes her feel like her very bones are breaking.

    This movie uses the Mexican legend of "La Huesera" to tell women to embrace who they are. La Huesera is a spirit who collects wolf bones. When she has enough bones, she calls the wolf's spirit to come back to inhibit them. When the wolf does, they both run free.

    In this movie, Valeria has to make hard choices to run free. But she does.

    The movie isn't a horror movie. It's a parable about accepting yourself as you are, no matter what the cost is.
    6kevin_robbins

    Very average with a few worthwhile horror elements

    Huesera: The Bone Woman (2022) is a Mexican horror movie that I recently watched on Shudder. The storyline follows a young lady with a checkered past who has settled down with a good man and decided it's time to have a baby and start a family. Unfortunately, some things from her past may come back to haunt her and spoil her plans.

    This movie is directed by Michelle Garza Cervera (Mexico Barbaro 2) and stars Natalia Solián (Red Shoes), Alfonso Dosal (Narcos: Mexico), Mayra Batalla (Prayers for the Stolen), Sonia Couoh (Potosi) and Mercedes Hernández (Identifying Features).

    The storyline for this movie is fairly straightforward but well executed. The acting is very good, the settings are well selected and the story is well paced. The horror elements have great sound effects and some worthwhile open wounds that make you cringe. The last 15 minutes of the movie does a great job flipping on its head and contains fantastic horror elements. The people at the end of this movie are very creepy and perfectly executed...though I wish the movie got there faster. I also wish they dug a little deeper into the main character's past and into the things she needed to do to survive.

    Overall, this movie is very average with a few worthwhile horror elements. I would score this a 5.5-6/10 and strongly recommend it.
    5tostesarantes

    Boring and irritating

    Boring and irritating are the words that can resume this movie perfectly.

    Maybe my disappointment came from the high expectation I had with this one. Anyway, it is what it is.

    All characters are unpleasant, even the children. The pace, the bad choice of giving the viewer information drop to drop just to make the length longer... I barely endured it - I needed to pause three times to check how long left to finish.

    The main problem is that the film had big ambitions but failed to achieve them. It focuses a lot on symbolism but, in the end, leaves so many elements loose here and there that the message arrived with noise, interfering with the understanding.

    Not to mention the quality of a big part of the production. Frankly, some scenes seem to be picked off some unfunny comic sketch.
    6captainpass

    Motherhood

    "Huesera" begins with "Valeria" dropping off flowers at the base of the Virgen Monumental de Ocuilan and ends right after she participates in a restorative, native rite. In between, we find out that Valeria is a former punk-rocker with a love of bass guitars, power tools and a certain "Octavia." What is she in the present?

    That is the central question is this rather well-done entry. The Valeria of the present is a woman who has (uneasily) embraced a conventional marriage to "Raul," an ad exec with wealthy parents. She lives in an upscale apartment, and she is pregnant with their first child. Yet as time passes, she appears to be the victim of increasingly violent hallucinatory episodes that lead her family and husband to grow both concerned for and irritated with her. "Pull it together," is the implied mantra; "a child is a blessing."

    While the obvious comparison is to "Rosemary's Baby," the film - to its credit- veers more in the direction of such psychological thriller/horror films as Altman's "Images." And despite a fairly large cast, this movie really is about a single woman's POV - Valeria (played here by Natalia Solián) - and it is her world -- her frustrations, her fears, her sense of ambiguity, rejection and pain -- that are front and center for the duration of the film. Her attempts to negotiate the expectations of others -- often cruelly rejected by those others -- lead her to an increased debilitation that almost result in absolute tragedy. It is her (similarly outcast) aunt who helps her on her way to a restoration of self.

    The film is a definite slow burn. But if you enjoy a more overtly psychological exploration of a woman-at-the-margins, torn between seemingly opposing social contexts, this might work for you.
    5m-sileo

    Not good

    Huesera, the directorial debut of Mexican filmmaker Michelle Garza Cervera, presents itself as a film exploring the desire to be a mother and the consequences of having a child, all within a horror premise. However, the result is a movie that, although ambitious, leaves much to be desired.

    One of the standout elements is undoubtedly Natalia Solián's performance. Her acting effectively conveys the nerves, fears, and trauma of being a first-time mother. Solián grabs the viewer's attention by making every emotion and doubt of her character feel genuine. The issue, however, is that the script and narrative don't support her.

    The biggest problem with Huesera lies in its pacing and storytelling. The film becomes boring and tedious at several points, especially when it delves into areas where horror should be at the forefront but isn't. The lack of a consistent atmosphere of fear causes the film to lose its focus. The horror elements are missing, which leads to the film losing the tone it initially promised.

    The script, on the other hand, is another weak point. The story feels incomplete, with many narrative gaps. There are moments where it seems material was cut during post-production, leaving unanswered questions and unexplained events. This affects the coherence of the plot.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      The title is derived from the folklore of La Huesera, a mysterious female figure who roamed the desert gathering bones. Said to favour those of wolves, La Huesera would assemble an entire skeleton, before singing to it. Her song would eventually bring the deceased creature back to life, granting it freedom to roam the plains once more.
    • Connections
      Featured in Horrible Reviews: The Horrors Of 2023: Huesera: The Bone Woman | Video review (2023)
    • Soundtracks
      Sabinas
      Performed by Norma Reyna, Gina Morett and Rocío Belmont

      Written by Gibrán Andrade (as Gibrán Androide) and Cabeza de Vaca

      Courtesy of Gibrán Andrade (as Gibrán Androide) and Cabeza de Vaca

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    FAQ17

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • February 23, 2023 (Mexico)
    • Countries of origin
      • Mexico
      • Peru
    • Language
      • Spanish
    • Also known as
      • Huesera: The Bone Woman
    • Production companies
      • Disruptiva Films
      • LCI Seguros
      • Machete Producciones
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Gross worldwide
      • $1,685,816
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      • 1h 37m(97 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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