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What was the most disturbing movie that you ever saw?

Posted - August 18, 2019

Responses


  • 46117
    Gone baby, gone.  

    OH man.  
      August 18, 2019 3:12 PM MDT
    3

  • 22904
    I fear to watch it but you've mentioned this movie before adn I've not seen it  - - I'm still very intrigued.
      August 18, 2019 6:56 PM MDT
    1

  • 46117
    I cannot remember much of it now except the horrible …. oh I cannot give it away.  

    You will see it one day, I think.  


      August 18, 2019 10:16 PM MDT
    2

  • 6988
    I seldom watch horror movies with killing. I tried to watch 'Jeepers Creepers', but it got too complex to make a whole lotta sense. My fantasy mind is not up to horror movies. 
      August 18, 2019 3:17 PM MDT
    4

  • 17398
    The Deer Hunter.  I couldn't stay in the theatre.  I had too many friends in Viet Nam.
      August 18, 2019 6:22 PM MDT
    5

  • 46117
    THAT ONE GOT TO ME. I forgot about how affected I was.  OH MAN.  That and Looking for Mr. Goodbar got to me.  
      August 18, 2019 10:17 PM MDT
    2

  • 22904

    By far -- very far - - Director Michael Haneke's original version 1997 film "Funny Games"

    (NOT the American remake with the same title that Haneke himself made of of his own movie; I've not seen the remake)


     -- the movie is an absolute MASTERPIECE of film making to me - - yes, I'm shouting - - but one time was enough for me to watch


    Image result for 1997 Funny games movie poster


    Image result for funny games 1997 movie poster


    This post was edited by WelbyQuentin at August 22, 2019 12:03 PM MDT
      August 18, 2019 6:59 PM MDT
    4

  • 46117
    I could not watch it. I know already.  NO. 
      August 18, 2019 10:18 PM MDT
    2

  • 22904
    Yeah, it's disturbing for sure but a great movie.
    :)
    But I don't blame you at all to avoid it.
      August 22, 2019 8:18 AM MDT
    2

  •   August 18, 2019 7:12 PM MDT
    5

  • 46117
    ??? WHY??? LOL  
      August 18, 2019 10:19 PM MDT
    2

  • 10026
    :) :) !!
      August 19, 2019 5:22 AM MDT
    2

  • 22904
    If she sings, I'll pass.
    :)
      August 22, 2019 8:19 AM MDT
    2

  • 46117
    WELBY!  She has perfect pitch and has 5 ranges.  She is her own instrument.  LOL  I guess that is why every note has to have all 5 ranges in it over and over and over again. 
      August 22, 2019 8:56 AM MDT
    2

  • 22904
    That last sentence you wrote - - EXACTLY! Ha! That is why I so often turn her off - - I sometimes like her singing voice actually, it's that she so often feels the need to scream -- woops - - I mean, sing those upper register notes way up there in the fifth octave in the sky.
    :)
      August 22, 2019 11:58 AM MDT
    2

  • 46117
      August 22, 2019 12:02 PM MDT
    2

  • 10026
    I try not to think of nor go to scary movies.  For some reason, being scared or having body parts spewing out, around, and off people just isn't up my alley as a form of entertainment.
    I have seen a few but don't really enjoy them.
    Because Anthony Hopkins did such a believable character, "Silence of Lambs" stuck with me for a while.
    It was more the acting than the topic.  Still, they both spooked me.
      August 19, 2019 5:26 AM MDT
    4

  • 16239
    Watership Down. I'm still trying to work out in what universe this was supposed to be a "kids' movie". I had nightmares for weeks.

      August 19, 2019 7:35 AM MDT
    3

  • 46117
    Even that PICTURE.   OH MAN.  I gotta see this when I am in the right frame of mind even for an adult.  That looks intriguing.  
      August 22, 2019 8:57 AM MDT
    1

  • 22904
    (I admit I really like this movie. It's based on Richard Adams' novel which I also really like. I like even more Adams' "The Plague Dogs" -- and the animated movie they made from it is great for me, too. But Slartibartfast is right -- these ain't no kiddie cartoons.)
    :)


    Image result for the plague dogs movie This post was edited by WelbyQuentin at August 22, 2019 10:29 PM MDT
      August 22, 2019 12:05 PM MDT
    1

  • 16239
    I was nine when it came out at the cinema. It probably wouldn't bother me if I had seen it first as an adult. Nine-year-old me was traumatized.
      August 22, 2019 12:10 PM MDT
    2

  • 46117
    Oh of course. I get that. But in light of what is going on, it makes it more profound and the graphics are great.  
      August 22, 2019 12:18 PM MDT
    1

  • 22904
    OMG -- yeah, I was very much an adult when I saw the movie. I didn't read your posted answer carefully enough.
    As a nine-year old I'd have been taken out, too.

    I saw "The Plague Dogs" as an adult, too. 
      August 22, 2019 12:18 PM MDT
    1

  • 3684
    Soldier Blue.

    In fact I could not watch most of the gory massacre, which was based on an only too real incident even though the film's central story - which I seem to recall was a romance between a native American woman and a US Cavalry man - was fictional.

    Another scene I found very disturbing the first time I heard it on the radio, is not from a film but an opera - Dialogues des Carmélites , by Francis Poulenc. Written in 1956, its central character is a girl who to the distress of her parents, joins a small Carmelite convent at the time of the French Revolution and the ensuing 'Reign of Terror'. The finale has the dozen nuns evicted from their retreat by the Revolutionary thugs, and one by one led off-stage to be guillotined, each marked by a loud, off-beat crash punctuating the remaining women singing the 'Salve Regina'. Even though my experience of it was purely aural, it made me feel rather queasy. Also angry and baffled at the utter pointlessness and brutality of the murders, because like Soldier Blue a decade or so later, it does reflect a real atrocity; though the dispersal of the original convent and subsequent "trial" and execution of its 16 nuns was more involved than the opera's version. 
      August 19, 2019 3:54 PM MDT
    3