A documentary that seeks to map the current scenario of Brazilian horror cinema to answer the following question: what's so appealing about working with the genre and producing some of our biggest nightmares?
Death and blood are in the middle of a feud between two families. Something creepy rounds the Silva Farm and makes its victims. The Carvalho Family, stuck to their past and hatred, can't see the secular evil that approaches from the darken woods.
A strange black spot approaches the coast, bringing death and destruction to a fishing village. In a desperate flight to escape the chaos, lonely Albino fights for the great love of his life at the risk of his own soul.
In "Arapuca" we follow the daily life of Marcos, a man who returns to his old home to look after his father, who is in the advanced stages of a degenerative disease that prevents him from seeing the reality around him clearly. Marcos is unable to communicate with his father and this invisibility is gradually corrupting him, mainly because it prevents him from finding answers to something that has been bothering him for a long time in their relationship.
Mathias is a feared serial killer who has been locked up in a mental hospital for decades. Based on a reporter's investigation, his story is told by the families of his victims and the survivors of his attacks.
Felipe is confronted by his wife, unhappy with the marriage, and by his mother-in-law. A simple discussion of relationship turns into a nightmare.
Thers's something in the morror!
A tale of terror about a man, a cat and a lot of blood.
She just wanted to relax, but something coming from far away destroyed her plans.
He buried his pain deeply, but it insists on coming back.
Tonho experiences marital problems due to his inefficiency in bed. To help him, his wife Zulmira literally becomes a zombie.
In the future, the government is totalitarian and our leader is an immortal head in a cybernetic mason jar.