Lars Henriks, filmmaker and host of the Mysterium Pictorum podcast, joins us to explore the first and possibly only horror film made in Russia during the Soviet era: Viy (1967). It's a retelling of Nikolai Gogal's classic but probably fake folktale, which also inspired Mario Bava's Black Sunday (1960) and a recent Russian-Chinese CGI-fest that has a sequel starring Arnold Schwarzenegger and Jackie Chan. No, we're not making that up – Google it! It tells the tale of a feckless seminary student who is called to hold a vigil over the body of a young girl for three nights, during with increasingly terrifying, coffin-surfing things occur to test his faith. Is it a relatively undiscovered jewel of spooky Soviet cinema or an unfathomable unorthodox oddity? Find out!
Find out more about Lars Henriks at www.larshenriks.de
Follow us on Twitter, Facebook and Instagram
Support us on Patreon to nominate future films and access exclusive bonus content
Altered States (with Lance Guest)
Innerspace
Dragonslayer
Ravenous (with Serge Bodnarchuk)
In the Mouth of Madness
Disturbing Behavior
Dead Calm
The Hole
Push (2009)
Xtro (1982)
The Fury (with Jacob Gentry)
Phantasm
Return to Oz
New Year's Ask Me Anything Special
Space Station 76 (with Manu Intiraymi)
Melancholia (with Catherine Mary Stewart)
Ladyhawke
Cemetery Man (with David Bruckner)
Halloween H20
The Vanishing (with Travis Milloy)
Join Podbean Ads Marketplace and connect with engaged listeners.
Advertise Today
Create your
podcast in
minutes
It is Free
Cinema: A to B
I Finally Watched...
Star Wars Escape Pod
Pod Meets World
Pop Culture Happy Hour