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Most disgusting movie you ever saw

Hannibal. I try to avoid gross movies as much as I can, though.
If you're referring to that scene at the end with the guy eating his own brains from his head, I thought that was just simply so ridiclious it was laughable

For me, the wife and I just finished watching Tokyo Gore Police. The title should have been a warning. Normally we both enjoy over the top action or gore movies, but goddamn this movie absolutely takes the cake on how disgusting a human mind can be. Or maybe the Japanese mind. Us dropping a couple of nuclear bombs on their heads really fucked their current generation up. :eek:
I'm curious now, what happens in the film that's so bad?


My most disgusting film? I don't know really, where do you blur the line of disgust and violence. The recent Rambo film was maybe the most violent film I've ever seen, but it didn't really "disgust" me.
It depends if you're talking about disgust as in "oh that's horrible and I'm so offended I'm turning this off right now and writing to my MP to have this banned" or as in "urg that's disgusting, but also cool and I can't look away!"
I mainly go the latter, and can't be doing with people who do the former


The Last House On The Left springs to mind, that bit with Kruge raping the girl whilst bloodily carving his name into her neck. That's not very nice, but then it's a "video nasty" film, so that's the sort of thing you expect/want.


Made into a movie, but the original book of American Psycho has some of the most disgusting things I've read. But at the same time it's also the funniest thing I've ever read so it's all good.
A rat, a vagina, a chain saw... :lol:
 
Alien vs Predator: Requiem. It a bad Sci Fi Channel quality movie masquerading as a studio film. That was forgivable. What was not was when they started killing tons of new born infants, small children, and pregnant women. It was disgusting and offended me greatly. Mostly because it was obvious they were using this shock crap to try and disguise a god awful movie.
See, I found myself cracking up at all those scenes.

Apparently I turned it off before we got to this scene. I got bored of watching guys in rubber suits fighting in the dark.

Anyway, i'll put in a vote for the aforementioned Cannibal Holocaust or I Spit on Your Grave. Neither film's gore is particularly convincing by today's standards, but the incredible meanness of spirit that both films are made with is more shocking than the gore.
 
Probably "I Spit on your Grave"

Also, there was this movie with Barbara Streisand and Nick Nolte where she was a psychiatrist; there is a scene in there where Nick Nolte is remembering an episode from his childhood where his family is assaulted, and some guy rapes him; makes a comment about "I never had a little boy before"

Forget gore; that is probably the most disgusting scene ever put to film in American cinema.

That's a good call, what a fucking sick movie.

My vote goes to the Guinea Pig film series - disturbing shit.
 
Dead Alive (also known as Braindead) has a lot of disgusting moments. Some rotting flesh falling off into soup, lawn mower blades chewing up through hordes of rotting flesh in a giant fountain of blood and gore. Not exactly a dinner movie.

The "I Spit On" movies are pretty rough, too. The movie I saw in a theater that caused more people to walk out of it than any other would be "Andy Warhol's 'Bad'". In this movie, a group of women that do bad things as part of their line of work are seen clipping off a guy's finger with pruning shears, setting a theater on fire with people inside and laughing while people burn when they can't escape, throw a baby out the window and splattering on the pavement with baby gore spraying on the people nearby on the sidewalk... Yeah - that movie seriously ruined a lot of people's day that evening.
 
Cannibal Holocaust. Cube, even Sin City, you're not going to get close to Cannibal Holocaust.
You're not lying. That's hands down the most disgusting movie I've ever seen. I felt like I had lost something after I watched it. I remember thinking that I wish I could unsee it.

I love Cannibal Holocaut- -at least, as much as you can love a movie that rancid. I have the poster, and I show my old VHS copy to anybody I meet who claims to like gore flicks. Or just anybody I know long enough...it's like a rite of passage. And I first saw it in middle school...and of course, immediately invited every single one of my friends over to watch it. Yeah, I was that kid. I must have spawned a whole generation of gorehounds through that flick! Oddly enough, the kids that decided to stay friends with me after I showed them that thing- -the ones that survived, I'm still friends with to this day. Make of that what you will.


I was once talked into watching some kind of experimental "art" film by a friend of mine that turned out to just be black and white footage of a dude sitting in a chair slowly disemboweling himself. I don't remember what it was called, but if I ever see it again, I'll punch somebody. Hard. In the face.

The movie I saw in a theater that caused more people to walk out of it than any other would be "Andy Warhol's 'Bad'". In this movie, a group of women that do bad things as part of their line of work are seen clipping off a guy's finger with pruning shears, setting a theater on fire with people inside and laughing while people burn when they can't escape, throw a baby out the window and splattering on the pavement with baby gore spraying on the people nearby on the sidewalk... Yeah - that movie seriously ruined a lot of people's day that evening.


...I'm going to have to try to find these. Was it Flowers of Blood and Flesh? I've always been tempted to try and track down a copy of that, but I've heard so much about it that even I've been...too intimidated.
 
Irreversible probably gets my vote. The rape scene is brutal.

There was also a british film (70s/early 80s) about these kids getting sent to Borstal (young offenders institute) and getting raped/abused there. Can't remember the title, and haven't seen it for well over a decade or so, but I remember it was pretty vile.

The kerbing in American History X is also disturbing, but the rest of the film is OK, so it doesn't get the overall title.
 
Some movies that made an impact:

Salo o le 120 Giornate di Sodoma
Irreversible
Cannibal Holocaust
Cannibal Ferox
Guinea Pig 2: Flowers of Flesh and Blood (the only 'good' film in the series)
Philosophy of a Knive (the most disturbing film about the Japanese camp Unit 731 ever, beating even Men Behind The Sun.)
 
Irreversible. It opens in a gay S&M club, in which we see a man's face bashed in by a fire extinguisher. But the hardest thing I've ever watched was a 10 minutes single-take scene of Monica Belucci getting graphically raped and beaten within an inch of her life.
The guy is actually her husband in real life. I read somewhere that she married him because she actually was highly turned on during that shoot. Freaky! :eek:
 
For me, the wife and I just finished watching Tokyo Gore Police. The title should have been a warning. Normally we both enjoy over the top action or gore movies, but goddamn this movie absolutely takes the cake on how disgusting a human mind can be. Or maybe the Japanese mind. Us dropping a couple of nuclear bombs on their heads really fucked their current generation up. :eek:
I'm curious now, what happens in the film that's so bad?
Think of .. I don't even want to remember. :lol: It's that horrible. I'd say it was very creative though, but really truly disgusting. Lets just say one of the least disturbing scenes were of a Japanese schoolgirl spewing acid from her tits to melt another woman.
 
Irreversible. It opens in a gay S&M club, in which we see a man's face bashed in by a fire extinguisher. But the hardest thing I've ever watched was a 10 minutes single-take scene of Monica Belucci getting graphically raped and beaten within an inch of her life.
The guy is actually her husband in real life. I read somewhere that she married him because she actually was highly turned on during that shoot. Freaky! :eek:

:rolleyes:

Her husband in the film, played by Vincent Cassel, is her husband in real life. Not the actor who played the rapist.

Man, some people will believe anything.
 
Irreversible. It opens in a gay S&M club, in which we see a man's face bashed in by a fire extinguisher. But the hardest thing I've ever watched was a 10 minutes single-take scene of Monica Belucci getting graphically raped and beaten within an inch of her life.
The guy is actually her husband in real life. I read somewhere that she married him because she actually was highly turned on during that shoot. Freaky! :eek:

:rolleyes:

Her husband in the film, played by Vincent Cassel, is her husband in real life. Not the actor who played the rapist.

Man, some people will believe anything.
Me I just saw the scene once. Both the guys looked the same and I repeated what I read on a fansite. :lol:
 
See, I found myself cracking up at all those scenes.

Get help. Now.;)

My most disgusting film? I don't know really, where do you blur the line of disgust and violence. The recent Rambo film was maybe the most violent film I've ever seen, but it didn't really "disgust" me.
It depends if you're talking about disgust as in "oh that's horrible and I'm so offended I'm turning this off right now and writing to my MP to have this banned" or as in "urg that's disgusting, but also cool and I can't look away!"
I mainly go the latter, and can't be doing with people who do the former

The difference between Rambo 4 and most of the others mentioned is that the violence was realistic, relevant to the material, had a message to it, and was part of an artistic statement. Stallone said from the people he talked to, the research he did, stuff like that goes on every day in Burma. He felt that if he downplayed it, it wouldn't have been honest.

Dead Alive (also known as Braindead) has a lot of disgusting moments. Some rotting flesh falling off into soup, lawn mower blades chewing up through hordes of rotting flesh in a giant fountain of blood and gore. Not exactly a dinner movie.

Yeah this movie was so over the top it was flying. Alot of Peter Jackson's early movies were like this little gem he made. That's right. Peter " Director of Lord of The Rings and The Second Coming of Jesus to geeky Christian kids everywhere" Jackson wrote and directed this. When the two zombies started having sex on the dinner table and during the climax one bites the others lips off and eats them. After that I was like "OK. This is just fucking stupid. I'm done.". Although the Kung-Fu preacher was pretty cool. "Crikey! I kick ass for The Lord!".

Pretty much everything out of Japan is fucked up on some level. I think the radiation from the A-Bombs must have gotten into the water and made them all fucking crazy. If you've seen Audition and/or Battle Royal you know what I'm talking about.

Audition is a nice little love story about a sweet, cute little hottie who stalks, captures, tortures, and mutilates her boyfriends in the most revolting ways. She dismembers them piece by piece with razor sharp piano wire. And the poor fellas have got to eat sometime, so she feeds them her own vomit in a dog bowl. Apparently it's considered to be a classic there. It's Japan so that makes perfect sense.

Battle Royale is half-satire about a reality show in which teenagers are taken to an island against their will, given weapons, and forced to murder each other with the last one left alive given the chance to go home safe. Yes it's every bit as fucked up as you can believe.

I've also heard I Spit On Your Grave, The original Funny Games, and 101 Days of Sodom are all just wrong on so many levels.
 
Haven't seen it, but does she get her kit off?

(silly question, I know. She always gets her kit off.)
 
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