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A reporter and his cameraman investigate Nina, a young woman who is in pasung because she has a mental disorder that turns out to be something mystical.
The struggle of a young pregnant mother to protect her baby from the powers of evil spirits and terrible terror.
Haruni screams in pain of being possessed by a devil. As well as being in pain it also tends to hurt her. Haruni's younger brother, Hanum, has glaucoma. Dr. Ahmad, who was treating Hanum, heard Haruni's story. He then treated Haruni during the night of the recitation. Haruni's body spasmed violently and managed to release all the bonds on her body and jumped into the window of the second floor of the house. Ahmad suspects that Haruni has a connection with the suicide case. The body of the person who killed himself also mastered the demon flowing in Haruni's blood. Ahmad and a police friend helped Haruni with a problem, looking for data on people who committed suicide, and expelling the evil spirit from Haruni's body.
In 1920s Dutch East Indies, Giandra, a young doctor from STOVIA, reads about Layla—a girl shackled in a remote village as a "cure" for mental illness. Disturbed, he travels to Karuhun, where tradition and mysticism prevail over science. Guided by journalist Rikke, who warns him with three words—Culture. Mysticism. Superstition.—Giandra must confront a clash between modern medicine and ancestral belief.
Samira returns home to the Djoyodiredjo family, a wealthy sugar conglomerate from the 1980s, after the sudden death of her twin sister, Sara. Unlike Sara, who had always been close to her family, Samira distances herself, fed up with the pressure of perfection and the inheritance dispute between Ari's two wives. On the first night of the Yasinan (Reciting Surah Yasin), a terrifying terror unfolds, revealing a dark, hidden family secret.