‘Achoura’: This Very Disturbing Trailer Features A Scary Child-Eating Demon

The kids are not alright in this dark and disturbing trailer for Achoura, a new horror movie from Dark Star Pictures. No camp here, people. Achoura looks like it’s serving up some old school terror and we are here for it.

Described as It meets The Babadook, Talal Selhami’s Achoura makes its DVD and Digital premiere on December 14, 2021.

In the film, four friends reconnect when one of them, who disappeared 25 years ago, suddenly comes back into their lives. Together, they will have to confront the terrifying events of their youth and fight a monstrous creature born of a horrible legend.

Oh, and it features a child-eating demon who looks scary as hell. You’re about to see what I mean…

Check out the grisly trailer for Achoura here:

Following raves at Cinepocalypse, Brussels Fantastic Film Festival, Bucheon Fantastic Film Festival, and more, North America gets to now witness the terrifying tale of a Moroccan legend.

About Achoura, Franco–Moroccan filmmaker Selhami shared the following:

“It is sociologically proven that fantasy and horror cinema has always enjoyed a renewed interest from audiences and critics in times of social and economic turmoil.

Fear cinema is therefore a kind of outlet for the viewer, unfortunately today too used to seeing atrocities through the media. Stories of ghosts, vampires, creatures hidden under the bed, allow us to transpose our fears into something unreal. The best way to play to scare yourself without taking risks.

The times we are living in are going through a terrible period, between economic crisis, terrorism, disease, natural disasters and the Arab world is unfortunately not spared. Far from it.

That is why I think that the Arab world also has today, and more than ever, its own fantastic stories to tell. Fantasy cinema makes it possible to bypass taboos, to expose facts, to stimulate the unconscious layers of the spectator, it is therefore, for authors, a wonderful tool for expression. When done well, this cinema uses allegories and metaphors to express its words. Its spread is wide, because fear is a universal feeling.

The Arab world has its advantage to offer because of its current effervescence, but also because the culture is still rich in counts, myths and legends, for the moment, not quite exploited.

Thus, Achoura tells the story of a Djinn, who during a religious festival, very specific to the country (the celebration of childhood), seizes the youngest in order to devour them.

In a way, it is a way of evoking the troubled future of future generations of adults. Because we may not give enough importance to childhood, too concerned about our adult problems. In Achoura children try to survive, thus preserving their innocence. 

In this sense, the creature of Ashura is none other than the allegory of adulthood that devours childhood and thus generates troubled beings. Childhood and the loss of innocence are subjects that haunt almost all of my projects.

Achoura is therefore a way for me to exorcise this fear.”

Younes Bouab, Sofia Manousha, Moussa Maaskri, and Omar Lotfi star in Achoura, which the distributor has skedded for a DVD and Digital bow December 14.

Will you be check out Achoura when its released? Let me know on Twitter via @joshkorngut. I’m always around to chat all things international horror!

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