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Science fiction turns green

Science fiction turns green

Raffiella Chapman plays Vesper, a teenager who lives deep in the woods, communicating with her father only through some kind of drone. Eva Jura / Condor Cast

REVIEW – This dreamlike anticipation filmed in the jungles of Lithuania delivers an environmental message by taking new paths.

On a land where nothing grows, mankind has returned to the state of medieval civilization. The planet is now dominated by a class of privileged people who live in refuge in castles, a kind of huge metal mushroom with tubular roots that sinks into the misty earth. The reason for this apocalypse is due to the madness of some agricultural researchers who played the role of witch apprentices by making genetic mutations on plants, animals and plants, making the planet sterile.

In a fairy chamber, lost in the depths of the Emerald Forest, disturbed more than charming, a young girl named Vesper (the formidable Raffiella Chapman, spotted by Tim Burton in Miss Peregrine and curious children He lives with his father. The ex-soldier who worked in the castle, the man, now bedridden, only communicates with his daughter through some kind of drone in the shape of a robot’s head.

The teenager messed around in a lab…

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