Thesis () is a 1996 Spanish horror-thriller film. It is the feature debut of director Alejandro Amenábar and was written by Amenábar and Mateo Gil. It stars Ana Torrent, Fele MartÃÂnez and Eduardo Noriega. The film won seven Goya Awards, including Best Film, Best Original Screenplay and Best Director.
In November 1995, ÃÂngela, a university student in Madrid, is planning to write a thesis on audiovisual violence and the family. Her commuter train is evacuated after a man commits suicide by jumping in front of the train. While being led out of the station, ÃÂngela moves toward the tracks in an attempt to see the man's remains.
At her school, ÃÂngela asks her thesis director, Professor Figueroa, to help her find the most violent films in the school's library, and seeks out a fellow student, Chema, who is known for collecting violent and pornographic videos. While ÃÂngela watches a violent film with Chema, Figueroa finds a tape hidden in the school's audiovisual archives. The next day, ÃÂngela finds Figueroa dead of an apparent asthma attack in the screening room and retrieves the tape. A younger professor, Castro, takes over the supervision of ÃÂngela's thesis project.
At Chema's house, ÃÂngela discovers the stolen tape is a snuff film in which a woman is tortured, killed, and disemboweled. Chema recognizes the victim is a student from their university named Vanessa, who went missing two years previously. He is able to determine that the killer used a specific model of Sony camera with a digital zoom feature, and that the film was shot in someone's garage.
At the library, ÃÂngela sees a handsome young man named Bosco using the type of camera Chema identified. When she leaves, he pursues and catches up to her. Bosco notices that ÃÂngela has newspaper clippings about Vanessa's disappearance and states that he has information about the case. ÃÂngela pretends she is filming a report about the disappearance and asks to interview Bosco about it. In the interview, Bosco insists that Vanessa must have run away with a boyfriend because she sent a note to her family saying that she was in love. ÃÂngela is willing to accept Bosco's innocence, but Chema tells her that he is a psychopath.
Once home, ÃÂngela realizes that Bosco is inside the house waiting for her. Although she is initially frightened, Bosco charms her family and they invite him to stay for dinner. Once alone, Bosco attempts to seduce ÃÂngela but she resists his advances. At the school, Chema asks a security guard to see the security tape of the video library on the night of Figueroa's death. That night, ÃÂngela has a dream that Bosco threatens her with a knife, performs oral sex on her while videotaping it, and then stabs her.
Castro questions ÃÂngela about Figueroa's death, showing her security footage of her discovering the body and taking the videotape. As ÃÂngela is about to admit why she took the tape, Chema calls and tells her to leave Castro's office immediately, saying that he is involved in the snuff film. Castro fails to catch ÃÂngela as she flees his office.
Bosco's girlfriend, Yolanda, confronts ÃÂngela and explains that she, Vanessa, Bosco, and Chema, who was once a friend of Bosco, had gone to a series of director's workshops with Castro two years previously. Yolanda states that she left when they made Vanessa take off her clothes for a short film, that Chema was obsessed with snuff films, and that she believes he killed Vanessa after the workshop ended. Later, Chema admits to ÃÂngela that he knew Bosco, but claims he also left the workshop when things got out of hand.
At night, Chema shows ÃÂngela a hidden tunnel he has discovered in the school's video library. In a room off the tunnel, they find shelves of video tapes like the one of Vanessa, indicating that many other women may have been murdered in other snuff films. Suddenly the door to the tunnel closes and they are locked inside. Fearing they will be killed, Chema and ÃÂngela walk further into the tunnel with only matches to light their way. They find an editing room where they fall asleep in each other's arms.
When ÃÂngela wakes, the lights have come back on and Chema is gone. She walks through a doorway and is chloroformed. She awakens tied to a chair facing Castro, who is videotaping her. Castro tells her that he only edited the snuff videos and did not murder anyone, but that he has to kill her and that her death will be painless and much quicker than Vanessa's. As he aims a gun at ÃÂngela's head, Chema appears and wrestles with him. The gun goes off, killing Castro. ÃÂngela and Chema escape. Once at her house, ÃÂngela's father tells her that her sister, Sena, is at a party with Bosco. Terrified, ÃÂngela hurries to the party. Once there, Sena refuses to leave with ÃÂngela, insisting that Bosco is in love with her. In order to persuade her sister to leave, ÃÂngela approaches Bosco and passionately kisses him.
The next day, ÃÂngela tells Chema they need to go to the police. Although initially reluctant, Chema agrees but takes a shower before leaving. While he is in the bathroom, ÃÂngela finds a Sony zoom camera among Chema's belongings, which contains a tape showing ÃÂngela from outside her bedroom window. Convinced that Chema has been stalking her, ÃÂngela flees. She goes back home to advise Sena to remain safe, then takes a taxi to Bosco's house. She is followed by a figure in a black raincoat.
At Bosco's house, he and ÃÂngela talk about their relationship. Suddenly, the lights go out and Bosco goes downstairs to check on the power. When ÃÂngela follows him, she finds him lying on the floor; Chema has followed her to the house and knocked out Bosco. However, Bosco revives and in the struggle that ensues, beats Chema to the ground. While Bosco fetches rope to tie up Chema, he tells ÃÂngela to look in Bosco's garage. ÃÂngela does so and recognizes the room from the snuff film of Vanessa. Bosco ties up ÃÂngela and explains how he intends to torture and kill her. However, she cuts her bonds with a knife, slashes Bosco, grabs his gun, and shoots him dead. ÃÂngela visits a recovering Chema in the hospital. On the television in his room, an announcer states that the bodies of six women were found at Bosco's home. ÃÂngela gives Chema a book inscribed with an invitation to have coffee with her and tells him she is going to abandon her thesis. As they leave, the announcer states that footage from a snuff film will be shown on air.
Main cast:
As a film made by a film student about film students, much of Tesis is metafilmic and comments on the Spanish film industry, Hollywood influence and the voyeuristic nature of the horror and snuff genres. Following the aesthetic of the American horror genre, Angela operates as the "Final Girl", or resourceful female protagonist that defies stereotypical feminine traits. Although Tesis fits the suspenseful mold of a Hollywood horror flick rather than its symbol-rich European counterpart, according to European film critic Marguerite la Caze, Tesis has a thesis: "human beings, no matter how well-meaning, are attracted to violence and death in all its forms". Joe Leydon assessed that Amenábar "provides an inventive plot and a sufficient supply of red herrings".
Tesis has generated much critical analysis due to its study of the fascination of violence. Film critic Leora Lev discusses Angela's ethical rejection and simultaneous attraction to violent images as this film's primary conversation. Lev states that Angela's psychosexual conflict with both the snuff film and the murderer, Bosco, is emblematic of the culture that consumes violent films and reality television series.
On the film-critics aggregator Rotten Tomatoes, Thesis has a critical rating of 83% based on 12 reviews.
|- | rowspan = "8" align = "center" | 1997 || rowspan = "8" | 11th Goya Awards || colspan = "2" | Best Film || || rowspan = "8" | |- | Best New Director || Alejandro Amenábar || |- | Best Original Screenplay || Alejandro Amenábar || |- | Best Actress || Ana Torrent || |- | Best New Actor || Fele MartÃÂnez || |- | Best Editing || MarÃÂa Elena Sáinz de Rozas || |- | Best Production Supervision || Emiliano Otegui || |- | Best Sound || Alfonso Pino, Daniel Goldstein, Ricardo Steinberg ||