Cannibal Holocaust

  • USA Ruggero Deodato's Cannibal Holocaust (more)
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Set in the Amazonian jungles, the film is a pseudo-documentary that follows Professor Harold Moore (Robert Kerman) into the "Green Inferno" as he searches for a documentary crew that came to the jungle the previous year to make a film about the storied cannibals that lived there, and never made it back. Now, Moore meets some natives and discovers the footage from the crew's expedition, and upon returning to New York, he watches it to find out what really happened. The truth is too horrible for words, proving that savagery is not limited to indigenous peoples, and the morally outrageous film proceeds to indict the exploitative practices of certain documentary practices. (official distributor synopsis)

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Lima 

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English This ninety minute showcase of brutality outwardly tries to give the viewer the impression that it carries a message. In fact, this pious message – to highlight the dark side of man and the shameful commercialisation of violence – is just a mere excuse for Deodato to show us the harshest snuff ever committed against animals in a feature film (turtle lovers, don't watch this) and to portray in an extremely authentic way the filth (there's no other way to put it) that man can commit against man. The level of authenticity is so great that while watching it, I wondered if it was really just staged (but not with the animals, they're really live murders). Overall summary: a very artfully made disgusting film that pretends to be profound, but I don't buy it. ()

lamps 

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English A visual-narrative experiment that is easy to dismiss for a certain self-evident and blatantly trivial idea, but it’s important to remember that Cannibal Holocaust is not a film that ever had or will ever have the intention to appeal to a wide audience and declaim its message at the expense of its mostly barbaric and unspeakable visual form. No, Cannibal Holocaust is a minimalist and distinctive piece of filmmaking, a self-conscious conveyor of a "real story" in such a realistic way that it transcends the dimension of the generally accepted nature of the cinematic journey and becomes not only a controversial and deservedly infamous work, but also a unique probe into the twisted soul of filmmaking itself, where certain fans, myself included, will always find something new and disturbing. And yet, I rate it negatively. The level of brutality perfectly fits the overall scheme, and to denigrate its self-importance in this regard is utterly absurd, but the absolute lack of interest and zero emotional response towards the characters or the ensuing action that I continuously (un)felt throughout is as much a loss for the filmmakers in the case of this film as it is for David Lynch's films to be fully understood :)) ()

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Othello 

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English A spectacular performance, taken to an almost unintentional high with its missing actors and a ban in sixty countries. Yet we don't see anything particularly brutal in the film (though of course a phallocentric society is less accepting of a white man's penis getting lopped off onscreen than with a cool sexy native impaled on a pole), so all the suggestiveness is created by the then atypical approach of literal found footage, in which we don't see much of the final massacre, but in uncomfortably long and obscured shots we catch elements of the dismemberment of a crew of demented men whose previous motivations are strangely nonsensical yet horrifying. The overreach of this approach is demonstrated by Deodato about halfway through the film, in which he projects us actual footage of executions somewhere in Africa while convincing us that these are staged situations, as well as poking at a few real animals, among other things, and wrapping the whole thing in a classic detective format and all the devices that characterize it. It's a great pity that the package comes complete with a slice of classic Italian filmmaking and the terrible acting and cannibalistic music that seem to have blundered in from some furry porn, but again, you can comfort yourself with the fact that you’re not watching some highbrow intellectualism but a no-holds-barred excursion into the world of cinematic freedom. ()

POMO 

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English It’s not easy to rate this film. Does good porn deserve some stars just for giving me an erection? Should I consider it a good thing that a film insidiously pressed the buttons of my innermost and most intimate visceral instincts, making me feel loathsome and guilty (guilty for voluntarily, voyeuristically watching the most disgusting thing under the sun)? The last shot of the film evokes the feeling that the director truly achieved his objective and won. If that’s the case, then Cannibal Holocaust deserves not three stars, but five. But that is VERY questionable and I would rather not rate this film at all. Because if that is not the case, they should burn every last copy of it. ()

J*A*S*M 

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English Well, what can I say… Unrealistic as a documentary, weak as horror, above average as a film, very successful as a controversial piece. Now it all depends on what you expect from Cannibal Holocaust. I wanted controversial horror and hence my rating: I was very surprised, but little scared → three stars. ()

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