Dachra |verified|
Forget jump scares (though there are a few good ones). “Dachra” builds terror through . The dusty alleys, the guttural chanting in Tunisian Arabic, the animal carcasses hanging from trees—it feels uncomfortably real . You can almost smell the decay and burning herbs. Bouchnak taps into deep-rooted regional folklore about sa7aba (female demons) and blood pacts, making it terrifying for local audiences in a way Western horror can’t touch.