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Its style is clearly inspired by spaghetti Westerns like those of Sergio Leone, featuring a mysterious, lone, antihero with a vigilante streak. However, the genre is reimagined with a female lead, and is a hybrid spaghetti Western-vampire film. As a vampire film it serves as an homage to its legacy of predecessors especially the 1922 German Expressionist film Nosferatu. Echoes of the film are seen in the choice of shooting in black-and-white, the use of shadows, and the minimal dialogue. The film's dialogue is entirely in Persian, and the film blends elements of Iranian culture with the spaghetti Western-vampire imagery described above. Saeed comes across a strange young woman in a chador at night.

The Girl keeps on stalking the illuminated nights. Arash is staring at one of the street lamps.The Girl skates by but stops in front of him. A drugged Arash asks the Girl where they are, as he got lost. He says that he lives in Bad City, but that this street is not familiar. He stops and asks her why she is in Bad City. Arash tells her to sit down with him on the street.
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They have sex in the middle of a deserted parking lot. The Girl passes them by without bothering them, but Saeed seems to notice in an unconscious way. The Girl is wearing a hijab veil and silently walks by. This startles Saeed, who pushes Atti out of the car without paying her, telling her to stop crying and calling her a hag. A young woman called Shayday calls Arash in.

This time she knows what she is going to feel so her reaction is more subdued. He is about to kiss her when she says that she has done many bad things. She wants to leave but he puts himself on her way.
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The Girl , with her vampiric teeth and supernatural powers, subverts the image of the veiled woman as submissive, turning the victimhood suggested by the film’s title on its head. This girl walks alone at night with no fear; she is the one to be feared—a fact the viewer learns along with her first victim. A Girl Walks Home...was heavily influenced by Jim Jarmusch's aesthetic, like a love letter to this director. A vampire western with a touch of romance - something I haven't seen before. Let's see if this unusual combination worked... The last few years were great for vampire subgenre, reviving it with a few films that have became instant favorites and, in my opinion, deserve their place in film history.

The Girl leaves and Arash enters the flat. He stares at Saeed's blood-stained dead body. He uses the opportunity to retrieve his car keys. Written and directed by Ana Lily Amirpour. The film was adapted into a six part graphic novel series published by Radco in 2014.
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He tells her to pack her staff in and leave the city with him. He begs her not to leave him alone.The Girl stays silent and gives him the back. She undresses and puts on a different t-shirt. The same dream-like sequence of Arash in the dark tunnel. This time, the camera is approaching him.He wakes up startled.
She has also said that "every piece of the story, every character, every costume, every bit of music" is something that she "love to the point of obsession." Amirpour has stated that graphic novels are a major source of inspiration for her. The visual language of the film is not unlike that of a comic book, with its "high-contrast monochrome aesthetic".
In this way, the film has feminist leanings. Suffering from heroin withdrawal, Hossein has an episode where he believes that Arash's cat is his dead wife. Infuriated by his father, Arash gives him drugs and money and throws him out, telling him to take the cat with him. Hossein goes to Atti and forces her to take heroin with him.
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When I see a film made after the 1960s made in black-and-white it makes me weary at first. Some films do it as a gimmick, others to make it seem more artsy then other indie films, and some use it with purpose. A Girl Walks Home Alone at Night thankfully is the latter of these scenarios and a wonderful debut feature length film for it's director, Ana Lily Amirpour. The film is a blend of horror, western films, film noir, and romance all mashed into one creatively original piece of cinema. It revolves around a small group of characters and their relationships. I won't spoil the film by telling details about each and every character, suffice it to say that they are well layered and complex.