• ⭐️ ⭐️ ⭐️ ⭐️ ⭐️ ⭐️ ⭐️ ⭐️ ⭐️ ⭐️ ⭐️ ⭐️ ⭐️ ⭐️



    Film & Television

    Welcome Guest


    ⭐️ ⭐️ ⭐️ ⭐️ ⭐️ ⭐️ ⭐️ ⭐️ ⭐️ ⭐️ ⭐️ ⭐️ ⭐️ ⭐️
  • ⭐️ ⭐️ ⭐️ ⭐️ ⭐️ ⭐️ ⭐️ ⭐️ ⭐️ ⭐️ ⭐️ ⭐️ ⭐️ ⭐️
    Forum Rules Film Chit-Chat
    Recently Watched Best Documentaries
    ⭐️ ⭐️ ⭐️ ⭐️ ⭐️ ⭐️ ⭐️ ⭐️ ⭐️ ⭐️ ⭐️ ⭐️ ⭐️ ⭐️
  • Film & TV Moderators: ghostfreak

The most disturbing film you have seen?

^ After 200 posts you'd think one would figure out that it's a faux pas to make multiple thread about the exact same question. It's also kinda off-putting to ask the same question over and over again in the same thread. We know you want more movies like this. If people know of others that are similar they will contribute. Uh, and it's kinda creepy that you keep asking about this particular type of film. That's probably why people are reacting negatively. So just chill out dude.

I haven't seen Salo or 120 Days of Sodom that ali talked about but I read the synopsis and it sounds like your cup of tea.
 
vegan said:
they are like aid workers who have to create their own anti-feelings bubble to protect themselves from their surrounding

vegan said:
if an abattoir worker is not especially sensible, he is quickly encouraged by the behaviour of his co-workers to forget about the pain he sees

You're making the massive assumption that everyone is equally horrified by the killing of animals, but butchering used to be an everyday thing. In many places in the world it still is. You and I, however, live in a society in which we are removed from that reality. Instead of slaughtering our own pigs, someone else who we don't have to think about does it. If you grew up on a farm and raised and slaughtered your own livestock rather than relying on big industry, then you probably wouldn't be so shocked. Due to being removed from the reality of the food chain, we as a species no longer understand death.

(I think what's disturbing for some people is the contrast from ignorance to reality rather than the reality itself.)

vegan said:
i only see meat as corpse, not as food

It's both though isn't it:

me said:
Due to being removed from the reality of the food chain, we as a species no longer understand death.

The consumption of meat is not evil and people will never stop eating meat, so the guilt-trip method isn't going to work. You can't try and convince people that the consumption of meat is a bad thing because it isn't. Bad conditions in certain abattoirs or factory farms don't reflect the industry as a whole.

I eat a lot of raw salmon, for example. Probably makes up half the meat I consume. Do you think salmon are mistreated?

Ever see a cat play with a bird or a mouse before it eats it?

They take their time.

They kill them slowly.

They enjoy it.

Personally, I've never seen footage of a person being that cruel to an animal.

http://www.mytopclip.com/play.php?vid=11168

^Domestic cats are much worse.

Either way, though, death isn't pretty.

I'm sure a documentary maker could quite easily put together a montage of the most graphic footage obtainable, depicting animals killing other animals. And it would probably be difficult to watch, all of that death condensed into a film reel. But that doesn't mean that animals shouldn't kill other animals.

To question the conditions in the food industry makes sense.

But to say right across the board that meat is wrong is just silly.

You mentioned sentient beings. Then what about oysters? Do you really think an oyster is aware of it's existence?

Aren't most molluscs, in terms of sentience, closer to plants than animals?

The experts seem to think so:

http://www.animalsuffering.com/forum/viewtopic.php?t=7614

The current research on animal cognition/sentience suggests that most invertebrates are non-sentient. This includes insects, crustaceans, and most molluscs (see David DeGrazia's "Taking Animals Seriously" pp. 97-112 and Lauritz S. Sømme's report to the Norwegian Scientific Committee for Food Safety [available at http://jillium.nfshost.com/library/pain.htm]
 
Last edited:
Yeah the great sea lice conspiracy. I'm sure that salmon farmers wanted the fish to get lice. They planned it all. That's probably why they're developing solutions/ delousing agents/ etc. to solve the problem.

Those bastard salmon farmers!
 
"se7en" was really disturbing to me, gives me the creeps just typing this.

"caged" and "picture mommy dead" freaked me right out when i was a little kid like 7 or 8 yrs old. they're both '50s or early 60s movies.

vietnam era films disturb me in general but "the deerhunter" really got to me. it was the last vietnam film i saw and there are others, like "platoon", that i haven't and won't be watching. the whole topic of the vietnam war upsets me.
-izzy
 
well, i'm not for "regular killing" either

Fair enough. I'm not for "life at all costs". Both our contrasting positions do have in common an aversion to cruelty.

but maybe a point of the movie is to show that as long as man considers that he has full rights over animals, they will be many abuses among the less abusive but still "inhumane" exploitation
quite likely. i think this particular film, however, undermines this message with its rhetorical silliness.
 
I'd also vote for Earthlings. I actually had read about a number of the processes involved in factory farming, fur making, etc., but to actually see it was a whole different world. The image of the seal or mink or whatever the animal was that had been skinned alive is one I'll never erase. Seeing the dog casually tossed into the garbage truck won't be going away anytime soon, either. Not really interested in getting involved in the carnivore/vegan debate - to each his/her own is my view - but that movie changed my life big time.

It's kind of obscure, but Kids was a pretty messed up movie, too. I made the mistake of going on a first date to it. Needless to say, there was no happy ending to that date. Heh.
 
555
the deceased

last time you decided to avoid answering my posts, you pretended to put me on ignore

you only duped yourself
but that certainly laid the case for me :

not only are you willingly deaf to others' opinions,
but you are also a liar who doesn't deserve to be taken into account

i wish you to have someone else reply to your post cause i didn't read it

the ignore function of will power works better than lies

once i'll read comments from others saying that you've grown up and are not permanently on your period anymore, i may start reading those posts again
 
I'm not for "life at all costs".

i don't know if it was misunderstood or no, so just to clarify

i'm not for "life at all costs" either

in fact, i think that the universe would be better off without life as it has created more suffering than any devil could have hoped for

what i don't like in "regular killing" is the bad intention in "killing"


no, when i look at an apparently non-intelligent fish, i don't think that if it died it would make any difference to anyone

but if someone were to kill it, i would dislike the act of willingly harming an innocent sentient being

it's not about the "one life gone" part, it's about the "being mean to others" part
 
^hey bro, just fyi: vegan's a dude.

i don't know if it was misunderstood or no, so just to clarify

i'm not for "life at all costs" either

in fact, i think that the universe would be better off without life as it has created more suffering than any devil could have hoped for
okay, i misread. i understand.

what i don't like in "regular killing" is the bad intention in "killing"


no, when i look at an apparently non-intelligent fish, i don't think that if it died it would make any difference to anyone

but if someone were to kill it, i would dislike the act of willingly harming an innocent sentient being

it's not about the "one life gone" part, it's about the "being mean to others" part

the term "livestock" sends a shudder down my spine also, but your post raises two philosophical questions. is being dead a harm to the subject? and where is the bad intention in killing for food?

i doubt this is really the place for this discussion. bringing it back to the topic, i agree that you raise valid concerns. i don't think earthlings does these sentiments a positive service.

also, do not forget the ...
20090416-foodchain.jpg

;)
 
I thought Executions was disturbing.

My Own Private Idaho fucked me up a little bit too.

vegan said:
in fact, i think that the universe would be better off without life as it has created more suffering than any devil could have hoped for

Last thing I'll say, off topic: That's a bit of a depressing perspective, vegan. Cheer up. Life isn't so bad. Although people and animals suffer, that doesn't define the planet. A lot of the time, most of the time really, creatures aren't suffering.

Death may be difficult for you but that doesn't mean you should discredit life.

Life is beautiful.

(I tend to go on long angry rants when I'm withdrawing. Currently I'm coming off two drugs. That is why I'm a little edgy. Apologies, sincerely. I didn't mean to offend. I was just trying to have a discussion to take my mind off things. I realize I come across as a bit of a psycho sometimes. It's not intentional.)
 
Last edited:
Most disturbing movies I've ever seen...hmmmm. Well at one point,I think Salo was at the top of that list. And then I saw A Serbian Film. Uuugggghhhhhhh -_-
Sad thing is,the acting was great in the film and it was not bad technically speaking either. But the content...dear heavens.
 
Yay, more disturbing movies.

^ that icon is supposed to be a face blind-folded isn't it?

OOOooOOoo...how interesting, just what I've always wanted. A list of some "disturbing" movies to check out. At least what some people may find disturbing.. many may be interesting to me.

Heres one: Mulholland Dr. It was pretty damn disturbing to me when I first watched it. Then again, I was young, and what I've been through from then until now would completely change my first outlook on it if I were to watch it now for the first time.........HOWever considering the movie titles I've read on here, this definately qualifies. You should watch this movie if you never have, it will make you "think for a few days" or whatever.

Requiem for a Dream was disturbing too, it's a good movie. You should watch that FOR SURE if you're considering starting to take/do any type of opiates for "fun". It's a strong possibility that you could end up in a similar situation to this movie's premise..

Funny that I own both of these movies, and I didn't buy either of them. I would have though, for sure. I don't think the typical person wants to own movies like these that scare them or make them think in ways that they don't want to, or think about possibilities that are likely to happen to them.
 
Last edited:
"se7en" was really disturbing to me, gives me the creeps just typing this.

"caged" and "picture mommy dead" freaked me right out when i was a little kid like 7 or 8 yrs old. they're both '50s or early 60s movies.

vietnam era films disturb me in general but "the deerhunter" really got to me. it was the last vietnam film i saw and there are others, like "platoon", that i haven't and won't be watching. the whole topic of the vietnam war upsets me.
-izzy

My dad is returning to vietnam for the first time since the war.. this febuary. He killed alot of people there. He's completely fucked in the head now. He is not capable of showing emotions. He tells me he loves me by buying me a car or something. The movies never disturbed me though I had to watch them from a young age on.
 
Top