Infiesto is a 2023 Spanishmysterythriller film written and directed by Patxi Amezcua.[1] The film stars Isak Férriz as Inspector Samuel García and Iria del Río as Subinspectora Castro, two detectives investigating a case in a remote mining town.[1] Set against the backdrop of the early COVID-19 lockdown in Spain, the story centers on the sudden reappearance of a young woman presumed dead after months of abduction, revealing connections to a larger pattern of ritualistic crimes.[2][3]Premiered exclusively on Netflix on February 3, 2023, Infiesto draws inspiration from procedural thrillers, incorporating elements of serial investigation amid societal disruption from the pandemic.[4] The production highlights the Asturian region's rugged landscapes, emphasizing isolation and tension in the narrative.[1] Supporting cast includes José Manuel Poga, Juan Fernández, and Antonio Buíl, contributing to the film's gritty portrayal of law enforcement challenges.[1]Critically, Infiesto garnered mixed reception, with an audience score of 5.6 out of 10 on IMDb based on over 5,000 ratings, while select critic reviews on Rotten Tomatoes reached 80% approval from a small sample.[1][3] Some reviewers praised its atmospheric homage to detective genres, but others critiqued its handling of plot devices and pacing.[3][5] No major awards or box office data apply due to its streaming-only release.[4]
Development
Concept and Writing
Patxi Amezcua wrote and directed Infiesto, conceiving the film as a police thriller tailored to the atmospheric isolation of Asturias's decaying mining towns, which he identified as an ideal setting during travels through the region.[6] The script draws from established investigative genres, including True Detective, The Silence of the Lambs, and La isla mínima, to structure a narrative around detectives probing a young woman's reappearance amid suspicious circumstances.[6]Amezcua integrated Spain's initial COVID-19 lockdown, declared via state of alarm on March 14, 2020, as a core element to heighten tension, realistically depicting how movement restrictions and emptied public spaces constrained police mobility, evidence access, and operational coordination.[7][6] This choice stemmed from his observation that the pandemic's onset aligned seamlessly with the investigation's timeline, providing an apocalyptic backdrop that amplified the genre's stakes without overshadowing the core mystery.[7] The lockdown's causal effects—such as limited patrols and delayed responses—ground the plot in verifiable historical constraints, avoiding dramatized exaggeration.[8]The Asturian mining communities' inherent seclusion further authenticates the portrayal of investigative hurdles, emphasizing geographical and social barriers compounded by pandemic measures.[6] Amezcua viewed the confinement as the "perfect element" to resolve narrative arcs, infusing emotional depth into characters navigating both personal turmoil and professional isolation.[7]
Pre-production
The pre-production phase for Infiesto focused on location scouting in northern Spain's Asturias region, selecting sites in mining towns such as Infiesto in the Piloña municipality to evoke the film's themes of economic stagnation and communal isolation.[9] This real locality, emblematic of Asturias' post-industrial landscape with its shuttered coal operations, provided authentic backdrops without need for constructed sets, emphasizing practical logistics over elaborate builds.[10] The choices aligned with the narrative's grounded tone, avoiding urban or stylized environments in favor of rural authenticity that mirrored the story's constrained, introspective atmosphere.Vaca Films handled production in collaboration with Netflix, which financed the project early on, supporting a streamlined approach tailored to contained shoots in remote areas rather than expansive visual effects or large ensembles.[4] Budget considerations prioritized efficiency, with planning centered on natural lighting and minimal crew to navigate the rugged terrain, fostering the thriller's realism amid limited resources for spectacle.[11]Lingering COVID-19 restrictions in 2022, including testing regimens and health compliance checks, shaped logistical preparations, inadvertently reinforcing the screenplay's depiction of pandemic-era disruptions and isolation protocols.[12] These constraints compelled tighter scheduling and contingency planning, contributing to the film's portrayal of procedural hurdles under real-world pressures without relying on fictional exaggeration.
Production
Principal Photography
Principal photography for Infiesto commenced in late October 2021 and wrapped in December 2021, spanning approximately seven weeks.[10][4] The production utilized natural outdoor and interior locations to evoke the isolation of the Asturian mining region during the film's early 2020 COVID-19 lockdown setting.[10]Filming primarily occurred in Asturias, including the titular town of Infiesto in the Piloña municipality for scenes depicting the mining community's confined environments, as well as Gijón sites such as the Universidad Laboral de Gijón and Centro Niemeyer.[10] Additional sequences were shot in Galicia, featuring Covadonga Avenue and the San Amaro hermitage in Seoane (Forcarei, Pontevedra), and the Hospital San Rafael at Avenida de las Jubias 82 in A Coruña for key investigative moments in medical facilities.[10] These choices leveraged the rugged terrain and period-appropriate structures to ground the thriller's procedural elements in verifiable regional geography, avoiding constructed sets for authenticity.[4]Cinematographer Josu Inchaustegui employed visuals that highlighted the gray, rain-soaked palette of Asturias' mountains and interiors, contributing to the film's tense atmosphere without relying on stylized effects.[13] The tight schedule minimized disruptions, aligning with efficient Spanish production practices amid post-pandemic recovery constraints in 2021.[10]
Post-production
The post-production of Infiesto was coordinated by Loli Iglesias, with additional supervision from Lara de Gracia.[8][14] Editing was handled by Lucas Nolla, who assembled the film's investigative thriller narrative from principal photography footage captured in Asturias during late 2021.[15] Sound design, led by Juan Ferro alongside David Machado and Nicolas de Poulpiquet, incorporated dialogue editing by Jorge Alarcón and sound effects editing by Pablo Áset to support the film's tense, lockdown-constrained atmosphere.[16][14] Visual effects were minimal, with no major CGI sequences credited, emphasizing practical depictions consistent with the production's grounded realism.[14]
Cast and Characters
Main Cast
Isak Férriz stars as Inspector Samuel García, the lead detective navigating the investigation amid the early COVID-19 lockdown restrictions in Spain. Born on June 20, 1979, in Andorra la Vella, Andorra, Férriz trained as an actor from 1997 to 2002 and maintains a robust background in Spanish theater, including productions such as L'illa deserta and Europa Bull at venues like the Teatre Nacional de Catalunya.[17][18] His stage experience, spanning directing and editing as well, informs a grounded portrayal of procedural tension in confined settings.[19]Iria del Río portrays Subinspectora Marta Castro, García's partner in the case, emphasizing methodical competence in high-stakes rural policing. Born on January 13, 1987, in Barcelona, Spain, del Río received formal training at the Nancy Tuñón acting school and has built a career in Spanish television and film, including roles in Élite and Riot Police.[20] The principal casting for these leads was confirmed in public announcements by Netflix on January 15, 2023, ahead of the film's streaming debut.[4]
Supporting Roles
Antonio Buíl portrays Sargento Ramos, the local police prefect in the isolated Asturian mining town, representing the tense interface between law enforcement and suspicious residents amid economic stagnation.[14] Juan Fernández plays Comisario Basterra, a regional commissioner navigating community distrust rooted in the region's coalindustry collapse, which has fostered isolation and reluctance toward outsiders.[21]Isabel Naveira depicts Paz Nogueira, a town resident embodying the everyday hardships of post-industrial decline, while María Mera assumes the role of Lidia Vega, the abducted woman whose reappearance underscores social fractures without idealizing or vilifying the locale.[8] José Manuel Poga embodies "el Demonio," a shadowy antagonist tied to local undercurrents of desperation, and Luis Zahera contributes as a hardened community figure, illustrating causal links between unemployment and interpersonal suspicion in Asturias' depopulated mining valleys.[1]The ensemble remains limited, with fewer than 20 credited principals beyond leads, aligning with the film's modest production scale and thematic emphasis on confinement during the early COVID-19 lockdowns, as principal photography spanned seven weeks in authentic Asturian locations to capture unvarnished regional textures.[4]
Synopsis
Plot Overview
Infiesto is set in March 2020 in the rural mining town of Infiesto, located in Asturias, Spain, coinciding with the enforcement of the national state of alarm due to the COVID-19 pandemic.[1] The narrative centers on two local detectives tasked with investigating the sudden reappearance of a young woman who had been missing—and presumed left for dead—for several months.[1] Her discovery in the town's central area prompts an urgent inquiry amid the escalating restrictions, including mandatory quarantines and limited movement that complicate standard investigative procedures.[22]The plot unfolds linearly, paralleling the progression of Spain's initial lockdown measures, as the detectives navigate procedural hurdles such as restricted access to forensic teams and challenges in interviewing potential witnesses isolated by health protocols.[23] Initial examinations reveal physical trauma consistent with prolonged captivity, leading the investigators to reexamine prior unsolved abductions in the region.[3] As evidence mounts, patterns emerge linking the current case to earlier disappearances, suggesting a coordinated series of crimes in the isolated Asturian landscape.[24]The story emphasizes the empirical constraints imposed by the pandemic, with detectives relying on remote communications and minimal on-site personnel to build their case, highlighting how real-time public health mandates intersect with criminal detection efforts.[5] This structure maintains a focus on the core investigative arc without delving into speculative motives or resolutions.[25]
Key Twists and Resolution
As the investigation progresses, survivor Saioa Blanco's testimony reveals the involvement of three kidnappers rather than two, prompting scrutiny of a hierarchical structure behind the abductions.[22][26] The arrest of Santiago Marquina, dubbed the Demon—a psychologically disturbed Iraq War veteran—following a gunfight yields a confession implicating a superior, the Prophet, as the orchestrator of quarterly human sacrifices to the Celtic deity Taranis, conducted in isolated sites to exploit the COVID-19 lockdown's enforced solitude.[25][22] Interrogation evidence, combined with Lidia Vega's identification of Ramos from a shared occult group history and physical traces like photographs of victims and a linked vehicle at his family property, causally traces the rituals to Agent Ramos, a local police officer with a concealed obsession for Druidic mythology and reincarnation cycles tied to seasonal shifts.[26][22]The Prophet's motive stems from fanaticism interpreting the pandemic as an apocalyptic harbinger, justifying ritual killings every three months—aligned with solstices and equinoxes—to appease Taranis and ensure personal salvation, rather than any broader societal collapse.[25][26]Detective Samuel García, piecing together Ramos's Druidic ties and ritual patterns, confronts him at an isolated rural home but is fatally shot, underscoring the killer's willingness to eliminate threats within law enforcement.[25][22] This betrayal propels Detective Indira Castro to an abandoned coal mine, where forensic and testimonial chains confirm Ramos preparing to sacrifice a kidnapped nurse amid candles and restraints, mirroring prior crime scenes.[26][25]In the climactic exchange, Ramos proclaims his prophetic role and fires upon Castro, who returns lethal fire, killing him and halting the ritual without fanfare or institutional vindication.[22][26] The Demon remains in custody, his protective loyalty to Ramos severed by the leader's death, resolving the case through direct confrontation rather than systemic reform, as Castro rescues the victim and emerges amid ongoing lockdown extensions.[25][22] This outcome traces causally from evidentiary persistence—DNA traces, witness alignments, and pattern recognition—over any lockdown-induced moral erosion, attributing the crimes to individual ideological delusion.[26][25]
Release
Premiere and Distribution
Infiesto was released directly to streaming on Netflix on February 3, 2023, serving as its world premiere without a traditional theatrical rollout.[4][27] This approach aligned with ongoing industry trends favoring streaming platforms following the COVID-19 pandemic's disruption of cinema exhibition.[24]As a Netflix original production originating from Spain, the film was distributed simultaneously across international markets, including the United States, Argentina, Australia, Brazil, and the United Arab Emirates, accessible via internet streaming.[27]Netflix handled global rights, bypassing localized theatrical distributors and leveraging its platform's algorithmic recommendations to promote the Spanish-language thriller, which emphasized its pandemic-era setting and investigative plot elements through official trailers.[4] The strategy capitalized on Netflix's dominance in non-English content delivery, enabling broad accessibility without physical screenings.[2]
Home Media and Streaming
Infiesto premiered exclusively on Netflix for streaming worldwide on February 3, 2023.[2][3] As a Netflix original production, the film has remained available continuously in the platform's catalog through October 2025, with no documented removals or licensing changes.[2][28]The title is accessible in Netflix's service footprint of over 190 countries, enabling broad post-theatrical distribution without territorial restrictions typical of physical media.[29][28] It supports multiple audio tracks, including original Spanish and dubbed versions in languages such as English, alongside subtitles in various regional variants to accommodate diverse audiences.[2]No official physical home media editions, including DVD or Blu-ray discs, have been released or announced by distributors as of October 2025, consistent with Netflix's strategy for original content favoring digital exclusivity over tangible formats.[30][3] This approach prioritizes streaming metrics for accessibility, though unofficial or bootleg copies appear on select online marketplaces without endorsement from the production entities.[31]
Reception
Critical Response
Infiesto received mixed reviews from critics, with a limited sample yielding an 80% approval rating on Rotten Tomatoes based on five reviews.[3] Professional assessments praised the film's tight 90-minute runtime and its integration of the COVID-19 lockdown as a atmospheric backdrop that heightened tension through restricted movement and isolation, distinguishing it from standard procedural thrillers.[32] For instance, High On Films commended its pacing and temporal setting for creating a sense of hopelessness that amplified the narrative's stakes.[32]Critics, however, frequently faulted the plot for relying on derivative serial killer tropes without offering novel insights, rendering the story formulaic and predictable.[33]Common Sense Media described it as an "involving, if somewhat familiar" entry in the subgenre, blending police procedural elements with supernatural hints but lacking innovation.[33] Decider lambasted the forced melding of pandemictrauma with ritualistic murders as exploitative and tonally mismatched, arguing it undermined victim agency and devolved into existential dread without resolution.[5] Ready Steady Cut echoed this, noting realistic pandemic portrayals but criticizing the overall lack of groundbreaking elements.[34]Aggregate scores reflect this ambivalence, with IMDb user ratings at 5.6/10 from over 5,000 votes indicating modest appeal, though professional consensus remains sparse.[1] The film garnered no major awards nominations, underscoring its achievements as competent but unremarkable within the thriller genre.[3]
Audience Feedback
Audience feedback for Infiesto has been mixed, with an average IMDb user rating of 5.6 out of 10 based on 5,347 votes recorded by early 2023, a figure that has remained relatively stable thereafter.[1] On Rotten Tomatoes, the verified audience score stands at 41%, derived from fewer than 50 ratings averaging 2.9 out of 5.[3]Positive responses often highlight the film's gritty realism, particularly its somber cinematography capturing the early COVID-19 lockdown's apocalyptic atmosphere in Spain.[35] Some viewers defended the pandemic context as a truthful depiction of 2020 societal disruptions, appreciating how it grounded the thriller elements in authentic tension and isolation.[36] Genre enthusiasts valued the suspenseful tone and occasional effective twists, seeing the narrative as escapist amid real-world trauma.[37]Criticisms frequently focused on predictability, with users lamenting obvious or absent twists that undermined suspense, alongside frustrating resolutions that failed to deliver payoff.[3] Discussions in online forums reveal a divide, where thriller fans embraced the bleak procedural style for its atmospheric immersion, while others viewed the blend of serial crime and pandemic motifs as overly formulaic, amplifying media tendencies to sensationalize disruption without deeper empathy.[38]
Box Office and Viewership Performance
Infiesto had no theatrical release and premiered exclusively on Netflix worldwide on February 3, 2023.[4][39]Netflix does not routinely publish detailed viewership data for individual titles like Infiesto, but the film entered the platform's weekly top 10 lists during its debut week, reflecting short-term engagement.[40][41] In one tracked period, it ranked No. 2 in Spain with 12.9 million hours viewed, aligning with broader upticks in non-English content consumption on the service that year.[42]The title's chart presence was fleeting, with no sustained global rankings or exceptional metrics reported thereafter, suggesting modest overall streaming performance relative to Netflix's higher-profile originals.[43] As of October 2025, Netflix has announced no sequels, spin-offs, or extensions, indicating limited commercial longevity.[2]