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Andy K (10821 KP) created a video about Ravenous (1999) in Movies

Nov 23, 2017 (Updated Nov 23, 2017)  
Video

Cannibalism

  
The Thirty Years War
The Thirty Years War
C.V. Wedgwood | 2005 | Biography, History & Politics
(0 Ratings)
Book Favorite

"God, I love this book. It's the history of an utterly depressing war with no real nobility, that ultimately descends into cannibalism. Right up my alley."

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Kingsman: The Golden Circle (2017)
Kingsman: The Golden Circle (2017)
2017 | Action, Comedy
LOVED (0 more)
promoted cannibalism (0 more)
Contains spoilers, click to show
I did not like the Poppyland Scenes where she threw in the guy who betrayed her into an industrialized mincer and forced the new guy that he had brought in to eat a burger supposedly made out of him.
  
It’s like listening to two people you’re friends with talking about something you’re all interested in. They’re so funny. (0 more)
My first podcast
I’m only up to the 12th episode, and fell in love with it upon first listening to it. They may not always know all the details but they’re very informative and try to lighten the mood when things get too dark (such as cannibalism) so maybe we won’t go off and have nightmares. It’ll take a while but I plan on listening to every episode.
  
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John Berendt recommended Collected Stories in Books (curated)

 
Collected Stories
Collected Stories
Gore Vidal, Tennessee Williams | 2012 | Fiction & Poetry
(0 Ratings)
Book Favorite

"Tennessee Williams’s short stories are eclipsed by his plays, but they are by no means outclassed. His ear for dialogue, his eye for character and his dramatic gifts are as powerful in his stories as they are in his plays. Like the plays, the stories are flavored with a connoisseur’s taste for the strange and bizarre, including cannibalism, incest, rape, castration, nymphomania, alcoholism and murder. My favorite among the stories is the fiendish “Desire and the Black Masseur,” but there are many, many runners-up."

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Suswatibasu (1701 KP) rated Robinson Crusoe in Books

Oct 10, 2017 (Updated Oct 11, 2017)  
Robinson Crusoe
Robinson Crusoe
Daniel Defoe, Andrew Cullum | 1719 | Fiction & Poetry
4
6.0 (10 Ratings)
Book Rating
Outdated colonial claptrap
I didn't particularly like this book even as a child, especially its overt racist storyline. Robinson Crusoe, an explorer and wanderer, at one point becomes a slave owner, aligning himself with other planters and undertaking a trip to Africa in order to bring back a shipload of slaves. At this point, he survives a storm and a shipwreck and ends up as the sole survivor. Because of the initial plot, I found it difficult to sympathise with his plight. They also speak of cannibalism, addressing others as "savages". It's a colonial tale that has become outdated.
  
Reefer Madness (2005)
Reefer Madness (2005)
2005 | Comedy, Drama, Musical
9
7.7 (3 Ratings)
Movie Rating
This is one of my all time favorite movies. As a musical adapted to the big screen, it retains the rhythmic and incredibly precise movements you might expect from a well rehearsed play. Alan Cummings is brilliant, as are Kristen Bell, Christian Campbell, and Ana Gasteyer. The songs are catchy, campy fun, brilliantly skewering the original Reefer Madness for a new generation. As the film descends into reefer madness and the character's dangerous weed addiction provoke more and more unlikely responses, the film's reality begins to unravel into murder, chaos, and marijuana zombies.

Watch this if you like comedic musicals, cannabis induced cannibalism, or you just want to see Kristen Bell in latex S&M gear.
  
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Suswatibasu (1701 KP) rated Mother! (2017) in Movies

Jan 24, 2018 (Updated Jan 24, 2018)  
Mother! (2017)
Mother! (2017)
2017 | Drama, Horror, Mystery
Tries too hard to be something innovative but just turns out terrible
What an abysmal film. Convoluted to the extreme with very little actual plot. The main aspect of the film surrounds a lonely housewife played by Jennifer Lawrence and her troubled poet husband (Javier Bardem), and their unexpected house guests. From the first moment, we see Lawrence's strange eccentricities, her clear connection with the house itself. The more the house is disturbed, the more she is troubled and vice versa.

The guests begin to behave more and more erratically, to the point of ridiculousness. I have to say, I hated this film. It just made me extremely angry. Baby cannibalism is just uncalled for.
  
Show all 18 comments.
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Dean (6926 KP) Mar 2, 2019

If you like this check out the neon demon and Serenity both a bit surreal.

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Stephen (210 KP) Mar 2, 2019

Shall have a look at those, thanks for the recommendation ?

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Ducklady (1174 KP) rated the Xbox One version of Little Nightmares in Video Games

Mar 22, 2020  
Little Nightmares
Little Nightmares
Action/Adventure
This game was so incredibly dark and disturbing while at the same time being mesmerising and beautiful. It is about a little girl called Six who seems to have been kidnapped and has to escape a ship filled with what appear to be monsters and creatures. The imagery is downright creepy, from the suicide connotations and the cannibalism. The "enemies" that Six must avoid to get out include a long armed "janitor", Vile looking "Twin Chefs", obese monstrous "guests" and a humming geisha lady who is the most threatening of all.
I highly recommend this game, its fun and quirky to play for a quick play through but has lots of interesting hidden content to explore and fun achievements to unlock.
  
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John Berendt recommended Exquisite Corpse in Books (curated)

 
Exquisite Corpse
Exquisite Corpse
Poppy Z. Brite | 1997 | Horror
9.5 (2 Ratings)
Book Favorite

"Call it Extreme Southern Gothic, New Orleans division. The protagonists of this dark French Quarter novel are knee-deep in murder, torture, sex and cannibalism. The story is unabashedly grim (or as Brite himself puts it, “twisted, horrific”), but Brite’s prose is crystal clear, and his literate tone is sufficiently wry and ironic that it creates a sort of safety zone in which readers not normally drawn to this sort of stuff (myself included) can take refuge while they read. But even arm’s-length readers are apt to find themselves being drawn further and further into the story—seduced in spite of the themselves. Material that would be merely sick, disgusting, and unreadable in the hands of a lesser writer is, with Brite at the controls, surprisingly erotic and captivating. It’s a tour de force, in a literary category all by itself."

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