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[personal profile] cheshirenoir
So what movies disturbed you folks?

For me the list (In no particular order) would be:
Creepshow
The Shining
The Cook, The Thief, His Wife and Her Lover
Inner Senses
Santa Sangre

And no, I haven't seen the Ring yet :-)

Date: 2006-02-09 01:16 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] maffyew.livejournal.com
Requiem For A Dream

I think I sat in stunned silence and hugged myself for about twenty minutes afterwards.

Date: 2006-02-09 02:21 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] prk.livejournal.com
Scooby Doo.

How could they sink that low.

Date: 2006-02-09 02:25 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] utopos.livejournal.com
Working on the basis that repetition isn't wanted (but still mentioning that Oldboy is worth your time and money) and in no order:

Un Chien Andalou
L'Age D'or
Tetsuo
The Devils
Candyman
Prince of Darkness
Possession

I didn't actually find the Saw movies all that disturbing, viewing it as a couple of D&D scenarios with ACME props and stupid PCs might have had something to do with it.

The remake of The Amytiville Horror has an effective ending, pity about the rest of the film (same can be said about Friday the 13th. The Night Flier also has an effective ending but with a half-decent straight-to-video flick attached to it.

Event Horizon gave me creeps for the first half but its reliance on (tasteless) gore in subliminal cuts in the last few minutes turned me off it entirely (I now leave rooms if the film gets to that stage). I have similar issues with Wolf Creek.

The US remake of Ringu is worth checking out for the slight differences (although the superior-budget special effects ruin it), haven't got around to watching the US sequel though.

Must. Not. Suggest. This. As. A. Panel. For. This. Year's. Swancon.
Fandomedia on the other hand...

Date: 2006-02-09 02:51 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] zey.livejournal.com
Piggy: 110 Kilos in 25 Weeks (http://www.sbs.com.au/whatson/index.php3?progdate=31:03:2005):

This program gives a detailed picture of the life of Knor, a pig. For centuries, pigs had close ties to humanity. In the past decades, however, the existence of pigs has largely been kept hidden. We don't see them anymore. When we are confronted with pigs, it is at the butcher's or on the shelves in the supermarket where they are neatly divided into servings and packaged in plastic. Knor is born on a breeding farm in the northern Netherlands. After a few days, his tail is clipped and he is castrated. Together with his brothers and sisters, Knor spends the first ten weeks of his life on the breeding farm. Dramatic change enters his life when he is moved to the pig farm owned by Geert Roossien in Anevelde. Here, Knor spends the next 15 weeks of his life, in the company of 1600 other pigs. The end, when it comes, is as much a surprise to Knor as it is to the viewer. (From the Netherlands, in Flemish with English subtitles)

Anthropomophising an animal whose from birth to life on the farm to slaughterhouse to packaging... No punches pulled, no low blows. Seeing a character you've grown attached to for the entire film stunned and beheaded in a production line machine definitely ranks as the most disturbing viewing I've seen on the telly.
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