Director: Soheil Abdollahi
Cast: داستان این مینی سریال درباره زندگیه یک معمار بی تجربه است که به تازگی یک پیشنهاد کاری برای بازسازی یک عمارت قدیمی از یک آشنا گرفته است اما در این عمارت اتفاقات عجیبی برای وی می افتد...
Emarat'e Tariki is a 2019 Iranian horror film directed by Soheil Abdollahi, running approximately 50 minutes. The story follows an inexperienced architect who accepts a job to restore a crumbling old mansion, only to find that the building holds far darker secrets than peeling walls and cracked foundations.
What is Emarat'e Tariki about?
A young architect with little professional experience is offered a restoration contract on a decaying historic estate by a personal acquaintance. Eager to prove himself, he takes on the project alone, moving into the property to begin his survey. Almost immediately, strange and unsettling events begin to unfold around him — sounds with no source, rooms that feel wrong, and a growing sense that the mansion does not want to be disturbed. What begins as a straightforward renovation assignment becomes a confrontation with something that defies rational explanation, forcing the protagonist to question both the history of the structure and his own grip on reality.
Cast & crew
The film is directed by Soheil Abdollahi. The cast includes Sogol Abazari, Tannaz Mosayebi, Ali Abedi, Felora Mokhtari, and Morteza Khanjaani. Abdollahi draws measured performances from his ensemble, keeping the tone restrained and the supernatural elements grounded in everyday dread rather than spectacle.
Context & significance
Iranian horror has a long and underappreciated history, from the gothic atmosphere of early Persian cinema to the internationally recognized art-horror of more recent decades. Emarat'e Tariki works squarely within the domestic haunted-house tradition — a genre that resonates deeply with Iranian audiences familiar with the cultural weight attached to old family homes and ancestral properties. For diaspora viewers, the film offers a window into a distinctly Persian brand of supernatural storytelling, one shaped by local folklore, architecture, and social anxiety. At 50 minutes it is lean and atmospheric, more mood piece than conventional horror picture, and suits viewers who prefer dread built slowly over cheap shock.
Where & how to watch
Emarat'e Tariki is available on K-Time with the original Persian audio and subtitles. You can watch on the web, on your TV, or on your phone — no extra download required, no VPN needed, and no geographic restrictions. Subscription plans include a cancel-anytime option.