Spain is really good with thrillers, in a way that they often get international attention, especially Alejandro Amenábar and Oriol Paulo films. “Killing Words,” with its own original title, “Palabras encadenadas,” is another film on the list that would have an appeal to fans of the psychological thrillers. Based on a play by Jordi Galceran, the film is basically a psychological game between two lead characters: Laura (Goya Toledo), a kidnapped psychologist, and Ramón (Darío Grandinetti), her seemingly mild-mannered yet chillingly manipulative captor who sure will turn out to be one of the most interesting serial killer characters you have seen, thanks to Grandinetti’s complex performance.
The location is the same, so claustrophobic thriller fans will like that; it’s a basement where Ramón ties Laura to a chair and forces her to participate in a deadly word game. If she loses, she might die. Intercut with this plotline, Ramon is interrogated by the police for Laura’s disappearance. For a film like this to work, you need several key factors: first of all, it doesn’t need to feel like a filmed play. It needs to have its own atmosphere and cinematic language. Luckily, it has it all, and the film benefits from its setting as well as the central performances really well. It uses the dialogue and character psychology to drive the tension. Not every thriller needs some action; overall, the words can be enough sometimes.
The script has lots of twists and turns. Are they all really genius-level writing or full of plot holes? You’d need to reanalyze the whole film after finishing it, but then again, it doesn’t matter because the film is compelling enough. You just want to learn why this woman is here, what this guy wants, and what actually is really going on. And the film keeps you entertained while giving its answers. Certainly an underrated euro-thriller.