W_Z wrote:
After finally getting my hands on the full version of "Cannibal Holocaust" I watched it, and it is definitely one of the most disturbing movies I've seen. Made me think of listifying the most disturbing movies I've ever seen...this is not at the top of the list, but it is very haunting and actually very well made.
Seeing a turtle being dismantled is VERY VERY disgusting. And it happens for real in this movie. It is not fake. That's why it was shrouded in controversy--well that and the fact that it exploits just about everything you can think of...but it certainly shows the dark side of humanity.
So these movies can be movies that scare you, or just make you feel generally awkward and uncomfortable.
Anyway here's the list:
1. "I Spit On Your Grave"
2. "Meet the Feebles"
3. "Freaks"
4. "Cannibal Holocaust"
5. "Man Bites Dog"
6. "Happiness"
7. "The Exorcist"
8. "The Blair Witch Project"
9. "The Thing"
10. "Night of the Living Dead"
The funny thing is I own most of these movies...
I'll also give a small nod to the first 10 minutes of "Begotten" as one of the most visually captivating and horrifying 10 minutes of film footage I've ever seen. The rest of the movie, however, is pure shit and pretty much worthless. A shame...
Light 'em up...
i gotta add this because it's still rough to think about. took a few tries to get through all of it.
"Elephant" - Alan Clarke (1989)
No, this is NOT the godawful Gus Van Sant movie (although he borrowed the title, and shockingly misinterpreted what Clarke used that title for in his film).
Clarke's "Elephant" is so simple and that's what makes it most disturbing. All it is...is 35 minutes of random murders. No dialog (except for one scene, and it's very short), no characters. no motives. It's simply people being murdered. The camera focuses on the victim for a long time afterwards, as well.
Now, the reason Clarke made it was to show his anger about the Troubles in NI (and it takes place there). He titled it "elephant" after a remark made that the troubles are "like the elephant in the room" no one wants to deal with but they know it's there.
A contemporary of his said he was watching it and said "i just kept saying, stop...please, no more, stop." that's exactly what clarke's point is with this film. it's very, very hard to watch. it's not stylized and it's not photographed to make anyone look good. it just looks like documented murders. very real, and very painful...but damn effective.
also, danny boyle is connected with the film...one of his earliest produced films.