15 most disturbing movies ever made

Pauly
Pauly Posts: 4,519
edited March 2011 in The Clubhouse
Accoding to this guy. I'll have to check out a few of them

http://movies.popcrunch.com/the-15-most-disturbing-movies-ever-made/


Pauly
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  • janmike
    janmike Posts: 6,146
    edited June 2009
    And I haven't even seen one of them. I'm good with that.
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  • Face
    Face Posts: 14,340
    edited June 2009
    I've only seen two of those(that I remember), "Henry" and "Jacobs Ladder". I'm not sure if the latter belongs on that list though.
    "He who fights with monsters should look to it that he himself does not become a monster. And when you gaze long into an abyss the abyss also gazes into you." Friedrich Nietzsche
  • bobman1235
    bobman1235 Posts: 10,822
    edited June 2009
    I've seen Requiem for a Dream, Happiness and Irreversible. They definitely qualify.
    If you will it, dude, it is no dream.
  • sucks2beme
    sucks2beme Posts: 5,601
    edited June 2009
    I've seen Jacob's Ladder. Eraserhead was just wierd. My son's were watching it,
    and I sat in for about 15 minutes of it. IF you are over 20 or not under the influence,
    do not watch Eraserhead.
    "The legitimate powers of government extend to such acts only as are injurious to others. But it does me no injury for my neighbour to say there are twenty gods, or no god. It neither picks my pocket nor breaks my leg." --Thomas Jefferson
  • ESavinon
    ESavinon Posts: 3,066
    edited June 2009
    I'm surprised "BEGOTTEN" didn't make the list.
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  • wingnut4772
    wingnut4772 Posts: 7,519
    edited June 2009
    Requiem for a Dream was awesome!
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  • ESavinon
    ESavinon Posts: 3,066
    edited June 2009
    I've seen 3 on the list. Eraserhead, Jacob's ladder and Requiem for a dream.
    I will Rent the rest.
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  • shack
    shack Posts: 11,154
    edited June 2009
    The only one on the list that I've seen is Jacob's Ladder (I own the DVD). I definitely don't think it was that disturbing. It is actually part of a Trilogy by screenwriter Bruce Joel Rubin. The other two were Brainstorm (Natalie Wood's last film - she actually drowned while filming) and Ghost. In these three movies he was exploring concepts of what happens after/during death.
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  • zombie boy 2000
    zombie boy 2000 Posts: 6,641
    edited June 2009
    Would someone mind listing them? I can't seem to pull up that website.
    I never had it like this where I grew up. But I send my kids here because the fact is you go to one of the best schools in the country: Rushmore. Now, for some of you it doesn't matter. You were born rich and you're going to stay rich. But here's my advice to the rest of you: Take dead aim on the rich boys. Get them in the crosshairs and take them down. Just remember, they can buy anything but they can't buy backbone. Don't let them forget it. Thank you.Herman Blume - Rushmore
  • Pauly
    Pauly Posts: 4,519
    edited June 2009
    15. Threads


    Threads actually wasn’t a feature film. It was a BBC mini-series that aired in 1984 that detailed in excruciating detail the after effects of a nuclear war between the United States and Russia that escalated to include the UK. The movie follows two families as they all basically die for various reasons (medical, economic, etc.) in the months and years following the attack, culminating in the devastating conclusion that showed a UK with a completely broken civilization where kids can’t even read just thirteen years after the bombs dropped.

    Re-reading the above paragraph I realize my words really aren’t doing justice to how incredibly bleak Threads is, you really need to watch the movie to get the full effect. Luckily, (or not depending on how you want to look at it) the full film is on Google Video.

    14. Requiem For A Dream


    The book version of Requiem was included in our disturbing books roundup, but the movie might be the rare adaptation that actually packs a more devastating punch. The film had top notch talent involved, from director Darren Aronofsky to actors Ellen Burstyn, and Jennifer Connelly, and that’s not even mentioning the beautiful, haunting score penned by Clint Mansell. The anti-drug message is a little goofily over the top, but it’s still horrible watching people go all the way down the rabbit hole. Like most of the movies on this list, Requiem for a Dream doesn’t have a ton of replay value, and yet I’ve somehow still managed to see this four times. Each time has made me feel pretty somber for at least a day or two, and I also usually manage to kick the heroin habit for like two weeks. Thanks Darren A.!

    13. Last House On The Left


    It’s easy to forget now that he’s determined to make a bunch of crappy PG-13 movies (and endless Scream sequels), but there was a time when Wes Craven was kind of a badass. Back in the 70’s Craven directed some genuine classic horror movies, and the best of the bunch was probably Last House On The Left. The film is pretty non-stop with torture and gore, and even today is pretty shocking, especially when you reflect upon the fact that the movie was made all the way back in 1972. Last House was pretty controversial, having been banned in the UK for years. A remake was recently released, but it should go without saying that you are better off checking out the original (if you’re so inclined).

    12. Hard Candy


    Hard Candy isn’t a horror film at all, and it doesn’t rely on blood to get a rise out of the audience. It actually could have been performed as a play without losing much of it’s power, something that couldn’t be said about any other film on this list. I won’t spoil the plot too much, except to say that the film is extremely uncomfortable throughout, and it’s fair (although perhaps controversial) to say that both of the movie’s characters are monsters, to different degrees. Men in particular will cringe spectacularly at one particular scene (those that have seen Hard Candy will know instantly what I’m talking about).

    11. Jacob’s Ladder


    I first saw Jacob’s Ladder alone in a dark room in the middle of the night, and if I recall there wasn’t much sleep to be had once I finished. The movie features tons of disturbing imagery as Tim Robbins spends the film in a nightmare-ish state where you’re never really sure exactly what is going on. Director Adrian Lyne used a film technique in which an actor is recorded waving his head and body around at a low frame rate, resulting in pure nightmare fuel when played back at normal speeds.
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  • Pauly
    Pauly Posts: 4,519
    edited June 2009
    10. Irreversible


    Irreversible is a French movie presented in non-chronological fashion. Specifically the movie contains thirteen scenes and starts at the end of a night, going backwards to the beginning. The film is particularly famous for a Monica Belluci rape scene that is extremely graphic and just goes on … and on … and on, clocking in at over nine minutes. That might not sound horribly long, but you will think otherwise when viewing. Still one of the most graphic and intense things I’ve ever seen in a film.

    9. Happiness


    Director Todd Solondz is an odd duck, and while Happiness isn’t the only disturbing movie he’s ever made, I would definitely say it wins the title for most. Unlike most of the movies on this list, the cast of Happiness is relatively star studded and includes Philip Seymour Hoffman, Laura Flynn Boyle, Jon Lovitz as well as Jane Adams and Dylan Baker, names you might not instantly recognize but whose faces you’ll definitely know.

    The plot, without going into too many specifics, involves three sisters and their extended families. The movie seemingly centers on a child molester (a scene where he discusses his psychosis with his son is one of the most cringe inducing things I have ever seen), but has many sub-plots including Philip Seymour Hoffman having a fetish for making bizarre obscene phone calls . There’s no happy ending here, just a pit of suburban despair that will stick with you for years.

    8. Henry: Portrait of a Serial Killer


    Henry: Portrait of a Serial Killer is a 1986 low budget film shot for just $110,000 and is, as the title would indicate, about a serial killer’s crime spree and eventual education of another killer. This is well covered ground, but Henry: Portrait of a Serial Killer still manages to get to you by showing Henry to be completely and utterly without empathy. There’s a realness here that most slasher movies lack, and the critical response to the movie reflects that. It’s even certified fresh at Rotten Tomatoes with an 88% rating, an achievement these sorts of movies rarely attain.

    7. I Spit On Your Grave


    The 70’s had a lot of gory horror, and one of the best examples is probably I Spit On Your Grave, a movie centered around a woman’s rape and eventual revenge. The rape sequence rivals Irreversible’s in length and intensity, but the rapists certainly do get what they have coming to them, in all sorts of brutally graphic ways. The bathtub scene in particular will stick with you. I Spit On Your Grave was banned in many countries and was censored for many years in the US. Roger Ebert called the movie “a vile bag of garbage…without a shred of artistic distinction,” and further said that “Attending it was one of the most depressing experiences of my life.”

    6. Cannibal Holocaust


    Cannibal Holocaust really is one of the most controversial films ever made. It has a long history of being banned just about everywhere, and the director was arrested in Italy and charged with making a snuff film - that’s how realistic some of the deaths and dead bodies are in Cannibal Holocaust, the local magistrate couldn’t believe the scenes weren’t real. Cannibal is one of the best examples of Italian horror/exploitation, and while you might think certain cultures are a little strange (Japan!) Italy certainly has some weird stuff going on to have produced some of the films they produced in the 70’s and 80’s. While the director obviously didn’t really kill any of his actors or actresses there are several genuine acts of animal cruelty in the film, including the very real killing of a large sea turtle. This has caused Cannibal Holocaust to be banned in several countries even to this date.
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  • Pauly
    Pauly Posts: 4,519
    edited June 2009
    5. Audition


    Audition is still one of the weirder movie watching experiences I’ve ever had. I popped it in honestly expecting horror and mayhem, and instead got some sort of bland romantic drama for the first half of the movie. But it eventually took a 180 into insanity with one of the most visceral endings I have ever seen. Takashi Miike could have filled several spots on this list (think Ichi the Killer or Oldboy, amongst others), but instead I decided to just pick what I think is his most disturbing, which to me was most definitely Audition.

    4. Eraserhead


    Much like Takashi Miike, David Lynch could easily occupy several spots on a list like this. In our eyes however, Erasherhead narrowly edges out the rest of his oeuvre to be the most disturbing Lynch film of all time, and one of the most disturbing movies of all time period. Eraserhead is about a printer named Henry Spencer who has a deformed baby with his girlfriend who soon leaves him, forcing him to take care of the bizarre creature on his own. The pacing of the movie and it’s use of white noise both contribute to the immense feeling of dread that clings to you the entire time you are watching it, and like most Lynch films the entire thing is so confusing and dreamlike that you are never sure exactly what is happening, leading to a feeling of disorientation. If you are actively seeking out disturbing movies Eraserhead should be pretty high on your list. It will give you a weird night, but there won’t be too much mental scarring, something I can’t necessarily say about the top three coming up on our list.

    3. Salo


    Salo is another movie based on a book that made our most disturbing books list, and I’ll just reprint what was said about the book here, as it also applies to the movie only x10:

    The 120 Days of Sodom was a work by Marquis de Sade, who had to have at least one work on this list. The book deals with four wealthy men who want to have the ultimate orgy. To accomplish this they seal themselves away with a bunch of young men and women. The sex quickly turns sadistic and matters quickly turns to humiliation, pain, and killing. Pretty much every debased and bizarre sexual fetish is explored in detail in the book, with much of the work crossing lines that even today would be declared obscene in many parts of the US.

    Salo the film actually has a viewpoint, showcasing in extreme detail the lack of morality of fascists, an opinion that may have gotten director Pier Paolo Pasolini murdered shortly before the film’s release. And yes, that’s a Criterion Collection cover you see up there, making this one of the more distinguished films on the list, a fact that might be hard to believe following an actual viewing.

    2. Nekromantik


    Nekromantik is a 1987 German horror movie that centers on a character named Rob Schmadtke who works for a cleaning company that cleans up crime and death scenes. But this isn’t an early Sunshine Cleaning, because Rob likes to take the corpses home and have sex with them, something you might have guessed from the movies title. It’s not just Rob though, he has a girlfriend who if anything is more enthusiastic about necrophilia than her boyfriend. Copious amounts of blood, gore, and outrageousness are pretty much guaranteed to have you reaching for the stop button on your DVD remote control over and over and over, and if you can actually make it through the entire film you have a stronger stomach than I. In a saner world this would be the most disturbing movie ever made, but alas we still have one to go.

    1. August Underground Mordum


    August Underground’s Mordum is a direct to DVD movie that was released in 2003. I genuinely feel sorry for anyone that has seen it, as I’ve seen short scenes and wanted to pour Listerine in my eyes to feel clean again. Most of the movies on this list stick with you, but most have value as well, either by making social commentary, or if nothing else helping to understand the time in which they were made. I suppose it’s possible August Underground’s Mordum has some sort of merit, but try as I might I can’t imagine what it might be.

    The movie is a simulated snuff film that is ostensibly about a love triangle between two men (one of whom is the film company’s owner) and a woman. There’s really no plot to speak of though, the movie is shot with a handheld camera to enhance the faux-reality of it all and, much like ****, any plot is just there as a vehicle to get the viewer to the “good stuff”. Which in August Underground’s Mordum’s case includes infanticide, pedophilia, necrophilia, and lots and lots of extremely graphic and brutal murder. The movie literally has no reason to exist, except perhaps to show off the special effects capabilities of the production company. I am extremely liberal and anti-censorship and while I wouldn’t go so far as to make an exception for August Underground’s Mordum I definitely think the world would be a better place without it existing.

    So yeah, I wouldn’t actually recommend watching it. Seriously, unless you want to mentally scarred. But that being said, it easily tops our list of most disturbing movies ever made. I genuinely hope there’s nothing out there worse.
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  • BlueFox
    BlueFox Posts: 15,251
    edited June 2009
    Requiem for a Dream was awesome!

    Especially, the uncut verson. The soundtrack CD is great from start to finish.
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  • jdhdiggs
    jdhdiggs Posts: 4,305
    edited June 2009
    Wow, some/most of those I have absolutely no interest in seeing...
    There is no genuine justice in any scheme of feeding and coddling the loafer whose only ponderable energies are devoted wholly to reproduction. Nine-tenths of the rights he bellows for are really privileges and he does nothing to deserve them. We not only acquired a vast population of morons, we have inculcated all morons, old or young, with the doctrine that the decent and industrious people of the country are bound to support them for all time.-Menkin
  • zombie boy 2000
    zombie boy 2000 Posts: 6,641
    edited June 2009
    I've seen most of them and I really have to agree with these choices. Cannibal Holocaust was probably the most disturbing thing I've ever been subjected to. What makes it worse is the soundtrack, which would sound more at home in a '70's romance flick. To be honest, I believe I turned it off before the infamous sea turtle scene. No way in hell was I going to watch that. I mean... I can barely stomach the Nature Channel.
    I never had it like this where I grew up. But I send my kids here because the fact is you go to one of the best schools in the country: Rushmore. Now, for some of you it doesn't matter. You were born rich and you're going to stay rich. But here's my advice to the rest of you: Take dead aim on the rich boys. Get them in the crosshairs and take them down. Just remember, they can buy anything but they can't buy backbone. Don't let them forget it. Thank you.Herman Blume - Rushmore
  • Jstas
    Jstas Posts: 14,809
    edited June 2009
    I don't think Jacob's Ladder was all that disturbing. I think I would replace that with 8MM. That was a messed up movie.
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  • heiney9
    heiney9 Posts: 25,165
    edited June 2009
    Requiem for a Dream was awesome!

    Yes, it was. I'm going to add that to my Netflix list and watch it again.

    Several years ago I saw a movie in the theater's called "People Under the Stairs" (a Wes Craven movie). It was awesome but a bit disturbed. The wife and I loved it so much we asked friends to see it with us again and they both walked out after about 20 minutes in disgust.

    The People Under the Stairs is the story of a young boy (Fool) from the ghetto and takes place on his 13th birthday. In an attempted burglary (along with two others) of the home of his family's evil landlords, he becomes trapped inside their large suburban house and discovers the secret of the "children" that the insane brother and sister have been "rearing" under the stairs

    It is disturbing and deserves an honorable mention, perhaps.

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  • Toolfan66
    Toolfan66 Posts: 17,220
    edited June 2009
    Gardens of the night: Very disturbing to say the least, Disturbing and Sad.
  • Sherardp
    Sherardp Posts: 8,038
    edited June 2009
    heiney9 wrote: »
    Several years ago I saw a movie in the theater's called "People Under the Stairs" (a Wes Craven movie). It was awesome but a bit disturbed. The wife and I loved it so much we asked friends to see it with us again and they both walked out after about 20 minutes in disgust.

    H9

    Awesome movie, I've seen this one. I also saw "I spit on your grave". I'm a sucker for a good thriller, suspense, kill em all type movie.
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  • dancingwater
    dancingwater Posts: 18
    edited June 2009
    Some of the movies on that list is pretty disturbing but by then i was at a age when you know it is a "movie" and the end of the day there is a camera and crew behind that scene.

    Water ship Down. Saw it as a child in early 80's and it was one of the most traumatizing and scary movie i have ever seen. I have seen many horror movies but that one movie somehow en-grained in me that i still whimper at the thought of some of the scenes back then.
  • Toolfan66
    Toolfan66 Posts: 17,220
    edited June 2009
    Water ship Down. Saw it as a child in early 80's and it was one of the most traumatizing and scary movies i have ever seen. I have seen many horror movies but that one movie somehow en-grained in me that i still whimper at the thought of some of the scenes back then.



    Water ship Down: KICK's **** i love that movie. I still have the original VHS of it.
  • zombie boy 2000
    zombie boy 2000 Posts: 6,641
    edited June 2009
    I'd have to say the same goes for The Dark Crystal, Labyrinth, The Secret of Nimh, and The Black Cauldron. What was it with all the freaked out, horrific images we were exposed to during the '80's? With puppets and cartoons, no less.
    I never had it like this where I grew up. But I send my kids here because the fact is you go to one of the best schools in the country: Rushmore. Now, for some of you it doesn't matter. You were born rich and you're going to stay rich. But here's my advice to the rest of you: Take dead aim on the rich boys. Get them in the crosshairs and take them down. Just remember, they can buy anything but they can't buy backbone. Don't let them forget it. Thank you.Herman Blume - Rushmore
  • zarrdoss
    zarrdoss Posts: 2,562
    edited June 2009
    I am surprised Ravenoud did not make the list.
  • thsmith
    thsmith Posts: 6,082
    edited June 2009
    Apparently they have not seen Freaks.
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  • everpress
    everpress Posts: 862
    edited June 2009
    thsmith wrote: »
    Apparently they have not seen Freaks.

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  • thsmith
    thsmith Posts: 6,082
    edited June 2009
    everpress wrote: »
    "Gooba gabba goobba gabba- We accept you, we accept you... One of us! One of us!"

    ...

    Thats the one. The "Freaks" were real circus Freaks. Movie was banned in many countries. I do not think it was ever released to DVD. I captured on DVR and sent to my computer and made my own DVD.
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  • zombie boy 2000
    zombie boy 2000 Posts: 6,641
    edited June 2009
    And to think that over 30 minutes were cut from Freaks, and now are unfortunately considered "lost". I wonder how much more disturbing it would have been then. Can you imagine the audience of that era and how they responded to it? We're talking people that would literally faint at the first sight of Bela Lugosi.
    I never had it like this where I grew up. But I send my kids here because the fact is you go to one of the best schools in the country: Rushmore. Now, for some of you it doesn't matter. You were born rich and you're going to stay rich. But here's my advice to the rest of you: Take dead aim on the rich boys. Get them in the crosshairs and take them down. Just remember, they can buy anything but they can't buy backbone. Don't let them forget it. Thank you.Herman Blume - Rushmore
  • Pauly
    Pauly Posts: 4,519
    edited June 2009
    I'd have to say the same goes for The Dark Crystal, Labyrinth, The Secret of Nimh, and The Black Cauldron. What was it with all the freaked out, horrific images we were exposed to during the '80's? With puppets and cartoons, no less.

    Agreed!

    Pauly
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  • obieone
    obieone Posts: 5,077
    edited June 2009
    I'm surprised MY most 'F'ed up flick wasn't on that list....'KIDS'. I'm not even a parent, and that thing scared the crap outta me. It wasn't a blood & gore flick, but it still....*shutter*
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  • thsmith
    thsmith Posts: 6,082
    edited June 2009
    I bet they were sick, I know the first time I saw Freaks I was horrified. And I think house of a 1000 corpses and Devils rejects is funny.
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