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  1. Imago Mortis
    2009 · Horror · 1h 38m

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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Imago_MortisImago Mortis - Wikipedia

    Running time. 113 minutes. Countries. Italy. Spain. Budget. €3 million. Imago Mortis is a 2009 Italian - Spanish film directed by Stefano Bessoni. The supernatural thriller stars Geraldine Chaplin and is the first major screen appearance of her daughter, Oona.

  2. Jan 16, 2009 · Imago mortis: Directed by Stefano Bessoni. With Alberto Amarilla, Oona Chaplin, Leticia Dolera, Geraldine Chaplin. A series of strange murders take place in an European school of cinema and nobody, except the professors, seems to understand what's happening.

    • (895)
    • Horror, Mystery, Thriller
    • Stefano Bessoni
    • 2009-01-16
  3. Image of Death (Imago Mortis), from the Nuremberg Chronicle. c. 1493. Michael Wolgemut and Workshop. German, 1434-1519. This brightly colored leaf from The Nuremberg Chronicle shows five cheerful skeletons and decaying cadavers dancing, playing music, and emerging from a grave.

  4. Dec 3, 2015 · In Stefano Bessoni’s “Imago Mortis,” the study of capturing the last image that a human ever sees is discovered through a curious, young film student. Bruno (Alberto Amarilla) is an aspiring filmmaker at his school of film. He lives in a dorm, where he tiles the wall with self-portraits.

  5. Imago Mortis 2009 1h 38m Horror Mystery & Thriller List Reviews 18% Audience Score 1,000+ Ratings After popping out eyeballs, a killer projects his victims' visions through a camera obscura.

    • (21)
    • Stefano Bessoni
    • Horror, Mystery & Thriller
    • Alberto Amarilla
  6. Overview. They say that in 1600s, long before the invention of photography, a scientist named Fumagalli, was obsessed with the idea of reproducing images. He discovered that by killing a victim and removing his eyeballs it was possible to reproduce on paper the last image imprinted on the person's retina. He named such tecnique "Thanatography".

  7. Imago mortis. ★★. ½. Recent reviews. 2/100. They say that in 1600s, long before the invention of photography, a scientist named Fumagalli, was obsessed with the idea of reproducing images. He discovered that by killing a victim and removing his eyeballs it was possible to reproduce on paper the last image imprinted on the person's retina.

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