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What's the most offensive film?

CockAsian69

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Techman said:
Actually, I think that was an episode of the X-Files. If it wasn't, they probably stole the idea from there, or vice versa, as there was an episode exactly like that.

Techman

LOL I cannot listen to the Sam Cooke song Wonderful, Wonderful anymore because of that episode... Sooo fucked up! LOL BTW the new movie sucked ass!
CA OUT!!!
 

Doc Holliday

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Psycho. The original version starring Anthony Perkins & Janet Leigh. I'm referring to the famous 'shower scene'. Taking a shower was never the same again after seeing that scene.
 

Doc Holliday

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The Fly. The original version starring David Hedison & Vincent Price. I'm referring to the scene at the end of the movie when you see a tiny fly caught in a spiderweb & notice it has a human head...then you hear the poor fly screaming out loud: "Save me! Please save me!" I still get chills thinking about this scene.
 

hungry101

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Silence of the Lambs. The girl in the pit crying for her mommy. This disturbed me to no end.

Saving Private Ryan Is this what Omaha Beach was like? The medic crying for his mom.
 

Salmacis

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EagerBeaver said:
It seems that there are different interpretations of what "offensive" means in terms of a film. If it means being graphic and brutal, I would have to say that "Hostel" ranks up there among the most graphic and brutal films I have ever seen.

I would have to agree with Hostel and Hostel II. The whole concept of both films is very disturbing.
 

Dee

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For a well done scary movie see "Wait Until Dark".... at one point I jumped out my seat.... about a blind girl being hunted in her home....
 

Gotsome

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A friend of mine from work, who was lesbian, wanted a favour of me to accompany her to a new local and gay movie that she wanted to see. I said sure lets go because she was a friend and was very pretty. She didn't want to go alone, and maybe wanted to appear like we're a curious couple or something, I don't know.

The movie was called "Hey Happy" and was quite silly, mostly naked guys mugging the camera acting well, gay. I couldn't believe what I was watching and couldn't masterbate for weeks after the event.

http://movies.nytimes.com/mem/movies/review.html?res=980CE0DB163AF936A15752C0A9649C8B63
 

Tracy

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I am not sure if any of you have seen this... SPIT- Squeegee Punks In Traffic. It is a documentary filmed by a friend of mine. It was well publicized in the papers when it came out.

I personally do not find it difficult to watch being that I lived it many times over, but I watched it with a client of mine when it came out. (He was more of a friend and was some one who supported and helped in the best way that he could.)

After the movie was over he had remarked that it was hard to watch because my friend filmed the real life of long time street youth (not the "Weekend Warriors").
The film includes visiting real Squats, Drug use, Police interaction (the real form of police brutality in some cases presented. ), and much of the world that we experience and many people turn a blind eye to and pretend does not exist.

One of the most disturbing factors of the movie for me now is that some of them were my friends and some of the people in the film are no longer alive.

For true stories, this is a good one and also the fact that it is filmed on the streets of Montreal is something that would hit Montrealers harder than maybe others.
 

HG Hunter

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My initial thought when I saw the title of the thread was Caligula. I have to qualify that by saying I saw it in the theatre when it first ran in the late 70s and I was just old enough to get in. It certainly made me curious about a few things, but I remember some of the violence being a bit over the top.
The only other movie I've seen in a theatre that disturbed me was Schindler's List. The idea that this was very close to a documentary and then considering that this kind of behaviour actually went in and people were once treated like that just brought me so far down in the dumps for quite some time after I saw it.
I'm a bit surprised no one else has mentioned it yet.

Many of the others that were mentioned, I've not seen, nor do I think I'll make the effort to do so, after reading some of the comments.

HG Hunter
 

Doc Holliday

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Dee said:
For a well done scary movie see "Wait Until Dark".... at one point I jumped out my seat.... about a blind girl being hunted in her home....
It's one of my favorite movies ever. You don't get actresses like Audrey Hepburn anymore. This was the first movie where i saw Richard Crenna. I've disliked Alan Arkin ever since that movie. Today i realize he pulled on a heck of a performance, though....but not as good as Hepburn's, who was very convincing as a blind woman.
 

Doc Holliday

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When i was a kid, one movie spooked the hell out of me. I believe Deborah Kerr was in it. Or maybe it was Lana Turner. It was called "The Innocents". It involved a governess & two kids living in a haunted house. If i'd see it today, i think i'd still have trouble watching it. I must have had nightmares for a week after everytime i'd try to watch it.

I think there was a newer version of that story starring Nicole Kidman a few years ago. I believe it was called "The Others". I liked the movie & realized once i had watched it that it was probably based on "The Innocents".
 
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