Requiem
6.4

Requiem Trailer & Clips

All Season (1)

 Season 1

Cellist Matilda Gray's life is turned upside down when her mother Janice suddenly commits suicide. Going through Janice's possessions, Matilda finds newspaper clippings reporting on the disappearance of a young girl from a small Welsh village 23 years ago. With her best friend Harlan "Hal" Fine by her side, Matilda travels to Wales to try to learn more. What she discovers will cause her to call into question everything she thought she knew.

Cast & Crew

About

Requiem is released in 2018. Watch Requiem all seasons full episodes online - the Welsh Drama TV series from United Kingdom. Requiem is directed by Mahalia Belo and created by Kris Mrksa with Lydia Wilson and James Frecheville. Requiem is available online on Netflix and Netflix basic with Ads.

In 1994, a toddler disappeared from a small Welsh village, never to be seen again. 23 years later, in London, the mother of rising cello star Matilda Gray takes her own life, without apparent reason. Among her possessions, Matilda discovers tantalising evidence, linking her mother to the Welsh girl's disappearance all those years ago. And so grief stricken Matilda travels to Wales, determined to find out who she really is, even if it means unraveling her own identity. In the process, she uncovers long buried secrets in this remote community - including one secret more bizarre, terrifying and dangerous than anything she could have imagined: Dark otherworldly forces are gathering - they have been waiting many years for Matilda to return. If every life is a story, then for most of us, it's our parents who write the opening chapters. They record and remember our early childhoods as we cannot, acting as trusted witnesses to our lives. But what if you discovered that your parent had lied to you? That almost everything they'd said about their own history, and yours, was untrue? Part supernatural thriller, part psychological horror, Requiem takes its inspiration from the psychological horror films of the late 1960s and '70s - Rosemary's Baby, Don't Look Now, and The Innocents, avoiding easy answers, and instead playing on uncertainty and ambiguity. It's also a rumination on the nature of memory, identity, and loss, hinging on a universal truth: that when a parent dies, a part of you dies with them.

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