Most Disturbing Scenes??

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I thought the movie super was pretty ****ing disturbing and depressing. Watched it yesterday expecting a comedy but man was I wrong.
 
Regarding the things Celtic objects to, there are worse examples of this. August Underground Mordum, Salo, and The Girl Next Door come to mind. I've never seen any of those either. For some reason I do find myself fascinated by how far people have taken this stuff, and I have read a lot of reviews. Some of the descriptions alone have made me lose sleep.

What was disturbing in The Girl Next Door? I've only seen it once, so its possible I'm forgetting something.

SnakeDoc
 
What was disturbing in The Girl Next Door? I've only seen it once, so its possible I'm forgetting something.

SnakeDoc

I answered my own question. It just dawned on me that there could be another movie called "The Girl Next Door" besides the Elisha Cuthbert-as-pornstar one.

The plot of the 2007 Girl Next Door sounds a lot like An American Crime.

SnakeDoc
 
men behind the sun .......a whole movie of disturbing scenes using real corpses and body parts young and old and all based on unit 731 a real japanese biological unit operating during ww2, the crimes they engaged in were pretty unbelievable and depraved but after the war the americans stepped in shipped them to the states to carry on there activities there.
 
Ever see The Mist?

I love the ending of that movie.






So you find it offensive then. Fair enough. You just made it sound like it wasn't well done.





And for fans of gore it makes it better.

I still have only seen clips on YouTube, but what I've seen looks very well done.

Personally, I don't want certain images in my head (I understand Celtic's objection), so I haven't brought myself to watch it.

I did watch the ending which seemed very powerful. From the suicide to the closing music, it just hit me in the gut without having even seen the whole film (although I've read the plot on wiki).



Regarding the things Celtic objects to, there are worse examples of this. August Underground Mordum, Salo, and The Girl Next Door come to mind. I've never seen any of those either. For some reason I do find myself fascinated by how far people have taken this stuff, and I have read a lot of reviews. Some of the descriptions alone have made me lose sleep.

This guy highlights some seriously sick movies (and describes all the worst scenes... Most will not want to watch this).

[I have removed this video. The descriptions will be too graphic for most. PM me if you want the link.]


Most people don't even know these kind of movies exist.

There is another group of movies called Vomit Dolls or something. It is like August Underground but it has a lot of people throwing up on each other as well. Never seen any of them, but I know they are really gross.

It kind of amazes me that people, (and women) will agree to this kind of "art" I don't know it just surprises me what people will do to get in front of a camera (or for money)

Aftermath is 30 minutes of pure disturbing uncomfortableness.

Utterly insane. I don't know how (and more importantly, why) I sat through the whole thing.

Aftermath to me was not as bad as the Guinea Pig flowers of flesh and blood was. Both are fake but Guinea pig felt more disturbing
 
What is the fascination with gore? I'm not judging or anything, but, well, you know what? **** it, I am. Who enjoys this ****? Even your run of the mill gore stuff, like Hostel and Saw? What is the appeal? Is it some odd focus on the macabre?
 
^ I love it because make up. I love watching great prosthetic work. The gorier it is, the more interested I am.

Probably one of my favorite scenes in a horror flick. As a kid, I used to just be so fascinated by how they pulled it off.

[ame]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_kgNL1tYFvc[/ame]


Movies like Saw and Hostel don't allow me to have fun while watching the gore. I like my gore to be loose and funny.
 
I get it from a technical standpoint, but, why gore? There's plenty of other impressive stuff that can be done in the VFX department sans dismemberment? I was half joking about the "judging" thing, but I really am genuinely curious about the fascination. I mean, going back to the technical standpoint, if people were, say, basing it on accuracy, how would they know what's accurate? I know the internet's a very expansive place with some dark corners, but I'd certainly hope people aren't comparing this stuff to *actual* violence.
 
I don't know. It's fun to delve into your monstrous side. I love playing games, and shooting people in the face, I love watching gory movies, just for laughs...

But when it comes to actual, real violence, I can't bare to even look at it. It's off putting. It's disturbing. And bothers me on a subconscious, and conscious level. I've kept myself clear of real death ****, I have no need for that.

But watching people explode in movies and games? Yes please! :lol

If it ain't pixels and latex, I don't want to see it.
 
I can't take rape scenes or anything where a woman or child is being abused. It's probably the one thing I simply cannot sit through in a movie or show. My friends know this, which is why I've been told to never even see movies like IRREVERSIBLE, and I'm fine with that. I've walked out of movies that show actual rape scenes, like CASUALTIES OF WAR. And I got physically sick and generally angry during the absolutely appalling and unnecessary scene in the HILLS HAVE EYES remake. That pissed me off so much. Who wants to watch that depraved ****? Why was that in there? That scene was disturbing enough.

I'm okay with gore and general violence, though. It's just rape, torture, etc... particularly if there's women or children involved. Not for me, and never will be. And I'll often go out of my way to avoid it.
 
I don't know. It's fun to delve into your monstrous side. I love playing games, and shooting people in the face, I love watching gory movies, just for laughs...

But when it comes to actual, real violence, I can't bare to even look at it. It's off putting. It's disturbing. And bothers me on a subconscious, and conscious level. I've kept myself clear of real death ****, I have no need for that.

But watching people explode in movies and games? Yes please! :lol

If it ain't pixels and latex, I don't want to see it.

Don't get me wrong, I'm not innocent. I can't stand seeing the stuff in films, but I was playing The Last of Us, and half of me was saying "this is awesome!" while the other half was saying "****, that was some brutal stuff. Not sure if I want to do that again." I don't know what it is, but, in film, I can't deal with it, after a certain point. I can deal with it, to an extent, but nowhere near the level of some of the **** I've read in here. I hated Hobo with a Shotgun. It was fake as hell, but I guess I don't like the idea of people coming up with that ****, more than anything.

I don't know. I've read a few things in here that made me uncomfortable without having seen them.

I can't take rape scenes or anything where a woman or child is being abused. It's probably the one thing I simply cannot sit through in a movie or show. My friends know this, which is why I've been told to never even see movies like IRREVERSIBLE, and I'm fine with that. I've walked out of movies that show actual rape scenes, like CASUALTIES OF WAR. And I got physically sick and generally angry during the absolutely ridiculous and unnecessary scene in the HILLS HAVE EYES remake. That pissed me off so much. Who wants to watch that depraved ****?

That's another thing that's uncomfortable. It was probably relatively tame compared to some of this stuff, but I couldn't help but feel unnerved at The Girl with The Dragon Tattoo. It was kind of crazy, though. It was a packed theater because they have it the smallest auditorium in the building, and there were college kids and senior citizens, and just a diverse cast of audience members. You just wish you could see what some of the older folks were thinking.
 
I agree. However, I didn't have a huge issue with The Hills Have Eyes, outside of a normal reaction to the event....it's not a scene I need to watch again, but it gave me the correct feeling it needed too, which stuck with me through the rest of the film.

But I do skip it when I re-watch it. Don't need to see it again.

But The Last House on the Left remake's rape scene...wow. That went on for too long. It was an almost 5 minute rape scene. There's no excuse for that. Period.

The best way to do a rape scene, show a angry guy, show a woman, show him maybe, unzip his pants, shut the door. Bam. You know what's going to happen. You feel the fear. And you don't ever see it. And why should you?
 
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