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"My name is John Diant. Father, brother, head of the anti-mayonnaise society and slayer of the...

Out of Time
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Kaelyn Anderson lives a charmed life. She’s got a great job as an advertising designer, a cute...

The Jabberwocky Princess
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Beware the Jabberwock . . . The jaws that bite, the claws that catch! Kitchen maid Kainda is the...

Hal (The Duellist #1)
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A disinherited aristocrat, Halanya Thæc has been brought up in the confines of the imperial court,...
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Carnal Secrets Box Set
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Naked Nights Her Submission Taking Her Down Whether a woman embraces submission or demands...
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Twists of Time (46. Ascending #3)
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Alex once walked away from a rare ability to warp time, thinking it was only a young man’s trick...
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Andy K (10823 KP) rated The Brood (1979) in Movies
Sep 22, 2019
After the murder, his father-in-law also arrives, the situation worsens as he attempts to visit his daughter while in therapy without success. Still grief stricken, he wants to confront the doctor or at least understand what is happening.
Here is where the story becomes very unusual. The brutality being dispatched to various individuals is being administered by disfigured "dwarves" or misshapen children which makes no sense to Frank or the police which asks more questions.
After learning additional details, Frank returns to his wife's benefactor for a final confrontation with her and the doctor to ensure the release of his kidnapped daughter.
Cronenberg's early body horror films still stand as some of the most provocative of the gene and this film is certainly no exception. The deformed assailants provide immediate unique intrigue in the film representing something you have never seen previously and it only gets worse.
The total brutality they complete upon their victims is worsened by the fact some of it is even performed in front of children who would obviously be scarred for years to come.
The final reveal of "The Brood" is so intense, bizarre and graphic it will still turn off, repulse or offend almost anyone who watches it. Only true fans of the macabre, strange and totally extreme will find this palpable.
The great Oliver Reed is especially intense in his performance as the unconventional doctor performing his ritualistic treatments which include offbeat role plays where he has conversations with his patents pretending to be other people.
I can only imagine the reaction this film had upon its release in 1979.

For the Sender: Love Letters from Vietnam
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A box with Love Letters From Vietnam etched on top holds letters written from a passionate yet...

The Madman's Daughter (The Madman's Daughter, #1)
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A dark, breathless, beautifully-written gothic thriller of murder, madness and a mysterious...

Anne Neville: Richard Iii's Tragic Queen
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Shakespeare's enduring image of Richard III's queen is one of bitterness and sorrow. Anne curses the...