“The Ghosts”, a thrilling sensory thriller about the hunt for Syrian war criminals

Inspired by real events, Jonathan Millet’s first feature-length fiction film follows a Syrian exile on the trail of his former tormentor. The main character is played by the Franco-Tunisian actor Adam Bessa.

France Télévisions – Culture Editorial

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Adam Bessa in the movie "The ghosts" by Jonathan Millet.  (MOVIES GRAND EIGHT / KRIS DEWITTE)

First feature-length fiction film by Jonathan Millet, The ghosts is a dive into reality at its most violent and brutal. The 38-year-old director, who comes from documentary, has imagined a gripping thriller, a fiction therefore, to enter head-on into the recent history of the war in Syria.

Started in 2011, the conflict left several hundred thousand dead and millions displaced. It is a handful of them that the film focuses on. The ghosts hits theaters July 3.

The film was born from a long investigation into the cells of Syrian exiles responsible for flushing out war criminals from the Bashar Al-Assad regime and Daesh who tried to be forgotten in Europe.

“I spent a year researching the cells, meeting certain members, listening to stories of spinning, explains Jonathan Millet. It’s this mass of information that allowed me to create my characters.”

In the title role, Adam Bessa, sober and powerful, embodies a father who has lost everything. A man haunted by torture and the horror of war, torn between his thirst for justice and the temptation of the worst.

In the streets of Strasbourg, he tirelessly tracks down a man of whom he only has a blurry photo, his former jailer in the military prison of Saidnaya, in Syria. A risky manhunt as the clues are thin and the investigator is on the edge. These underground networks led by shadowy citizens really existed and notably enabled the arrest in 2019 of Abou Hamza, a former leader of the Islamic State. The press paid little attention to it.

The characteristic smell of the executioner, the scent of jasmine in the streets of Damascus, the sound of the executioner’s footsteps in Saidnaya prison, The ghosts gives an essential place to sensoriality. A choice which again results from testimonies collected by the director. “In Bashar’s prisons, we are in the dark, so it is hearing and smell that develop, he explains. We try to hear the executioner’s footsteps, we use touch to know where we are in the prison. All this reminds me of cinema and constitutes powerful material for telling reality.”

The music, sometimes loud to the point of obsession, expresses Hamid’s inner turmoil. Jonathan Millet leaves all overly significant images off-camera. Torture, murdered children and spouses, even the hero’s scars will only be suggested.

Once safe, what remains of these past traumas, how to deal with these invasive and haunting nightmares? What to do with this pain embedded in the flesh? Through Hamid’s destiny, it is the singular story of each exile that is brought to light. This long process of reconstruction whose outcome is never certain.

The movie poster "The ghosts" by Jonathan Millet. (GRAND EIGHT FILMS)

Gender : Drama
Director: Jonathan Millet
Actors: Adam Bessa, Tawkeek Barhom, Julia Franz Richter
Country : France
Duration : 1h46
Exit : July 3, 2024

Synopsis: Hamid is a member of a secret organization that hunts Syrian war criminals hiding in Europe. His quest leads him to Strasbourg on the trail of his former executioner. Inspired by true events.


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