

In 1913, an orphaned young woman arrives in Budapest to take up employment as a milliner at the hat store that belonged to her late parents but becomes mired in a search for a brother she had never known of.
Cinematography
Narrow Academy ratio traps you in Írisz's restricted, terrifying perspective.
Direction
Nemes's follow-up to Son of Saul doubles down on subjective suffering.
Production
Budapest recreated as labyrinthine hellscape of dying empire.

Director
László Nemes
Trivia, insights & behind the scenes
Nemes shot almost entirely in shallow focus 35mm, with only 10% of each frame ever in sharp clarity—forcing audiences to hunt for meaning.
The film's 1913 setting places its unseen violence on the eve of WWI and collapse of Austria-Hungary—history itself is the invisible monster.