The Letter Full Movie In English
The Letter Full Movie In English

GROSS Movie Scenes And The Stories Behind Them. Some film sequences are only for the strongest of stomachs. Disgusting, gross, and gory images are some of the most defining and iconic in movie history, despite naysaying critics who consider such content lowbrow and sophomoric. But in truth, creating such queasy sequences requires great ingenuity, technique, and imagination.
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The Internet Movie Database includes plot summary, user comments, and cast overview. Movies The latest movie news, casting updates and rumors, trailer sneak peeks, and expert reviews on MTV. Zardoz is a 1974 Irish-American science fantasy film written, produced, and directed by John Boorman and starring Sean Connery and Charlotte Rampling, and featuring.
Bringing blood and guts to the silver screen is serious work. Horror, suspense and science fiction films are often defined by these garish and grotesque moments, all of which spark the imagination in many facets: how do they come up with this stuff, and how do they bring such repulsive visions to life? The answers are often more surprising and humorous than such disturbing imagery would suggest. Here’s our list of 1. Whether from surprisingly practical and rudimentary techniques or intricate and elaborate effects, to the psychological toll witnessing such gruesome imagery had on the cast, these revelations are just as spellbinding and entertaining as the films they were created for.
Read reviews, watch trailers and clips, find showtimes, view celebrity photos and more on MSN Movies. The 20 must-see films of Fall 2017 includes several awards contenders and the next Star Wars movie, as well as the latest Marvel Cinematic Universe and DC Extended.
Without further ado, here are 1. GROSS Movie Scenes And The Stories Behind Them. Robocop (Melting Man)Paul Verhoeven’s sci- fi classic Robocop was originally so violent that it even earned an X- rating. The director trimmed up the cut significantly to get an R (he had to resubmit the film 1. But one scene he refused to alter was the “melting man” scene (named as an homage to cult classic sci- fi movie The Incredible Melting Man), citing it as one of the favorite scenes of test audiences. Funnily enough it was also one of their least favorite–Robocop has always been a polarizing movie.)In the skin- dripping scene, evil criminal Emil runs through a vat of toxic waste and rapidly begins to liquefy before getting hit by a car and exploding into bits. Special effects artist Rob Bottin achieved the sequence by using “Emil’s Pot,” which contained a rotting mass of chicken, soup, gravy, and vegetables that were siphoned from catering leftovers. He then poured the contents into balloons and threw them at the windshield, and disgusting movie magic was made.
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Maniac (Disco Boy Shotgun Murder)This grind house slasher classic’s most infamous scene sees the death of “Disco Boy,” (played by the film’s special effects artist Tom Savini). The character is murdered graphically onscreen by serial killer Frank Zito (Joe Spinell), with his head exploding from a shotgun blast fired at point- blank range through a car windshield. To carry out the effect, Savini made a plaster cast of his own head, filled it with lunch meat and fake blood, and fired actual live ammunition into the prop. The resulting brain- blasting effect, utilizing three cameras and filmed in slow- motion, was wonderfully revolting, and a high watermark of low- budget effects work. After the stunt was completed, Savini threw the shotgun into the trunk of film assistant Luke Walker, who drove off to avoid having to explain shooting off a firearm in New York City, and any possible misunderstanding a lifelike exploded skull might impose. High Tension (Car Murder Scene)Alexandre Aja’s gruesome 2. French horror movie High Tension (or Haute Tension) is full of gory goodies, and the scene where a trapped driver is eviscerated by a concrete saw (while a woman in the backseat is bathed in his blood) is unforgettably repulsive.
It’s a horrific moment rampant with juicy, viscera dripping goodness, best captured after a big vat of fake blood gets sprayed directly on the camera lens. In the film’s DVD commentary, director Aja explained that the shot was actually just a “lucky accident” that added to the disturbing texture of the film.
Funnily enough, the camera employed for the film (which was rented for the production) would maintain its blood soaked legacy long after the movie completed filming: an unnerved filmmaker on another project noted to Aja that the camera would leak blood when shooting at certain angles. Dawn of the Dead (Biker Disembowelment)Dawn of the Dead is full of notable, groundbreaking effects from the aforementioned Tom Savini, who was inspired by the carnage he witnessed during his service in the Vietnam War. And his work on the late George Romero‘s classic horror film proved one of the most iconic in zombie horror history, when a menacing biker is disemboweled and eaten alive by undead flesh- eaters trapped in a shopping mall. To pull off the grotesque effect, Savini made a prosthetic body cast and filled with it sheep intestines. And after a shot showing the zombies yanking them out with fervor, it cuts to the undead eating hot dogs and deli meats. During the sequence, a pregnant extra suggested that Romero and Savini film a scene where the zombies rip her stomach open and a fake fetus falls out, but both thought that would prove too difficult for audiences to handle, and would certainly squash any chance of an R rating. Sometimes, even the strongest purveyors of gore (and the godfather of modern zombie movies) have their limits!
Misery (Hobbling Scene)Oh, the hobbling scene from Misery. It makes our ankles hurt just thinking about it.
The most unforgettable scene from Rob Reiner’s adaptation of Stephen King’s novel has a pretty memorable behind the scenes story as well. The sequence, where the dangerously delusional Annie (Kathy Bates) smashes writer Paul Sheldon’s (James Caan) ankles with a sledgehammer, was originally supposed to be even more gruesome: in the novel, she severs his left foot with an axe.
This proved so unsettling that the original director George Roy Hill dropped out, saying “I was up all night. And I just could not hear myself saying, ‘Action!’ on that scene.” Reiner took over, committed to keeping the axe chopping intact, but it continued to prove divisive, with actress Bette Midler turned down the role of Annie because of it. In the end, Reiner came up with the bloodless alternative, even though the hobbling is every bit as unsettling. It was accomplished by Bates hitting plaster molds of Caan’s feet (filled with gelatin), that would swing to extreme angles thanks to inserted armatures.
Bates found the effects so realistic that she became upset after filming the scene, as Caan recalled: “She’s so antiviolent…she literally was crying. Stand By Me (Pie- eating Contest)In addition to Misery, Director Rob Reiner helmed another Stephen King property: Stand By Me (adapted from King’s novella The Body). The coming of age tale focused on young Gordie (Will Wheaton), who had aspirations of becoming a writer.
And in one notorious scene, his short story The Revenge of Lardass Hogan was brought to vibrant, projectile- vomiting life. The story ends with Hogan causing a chain reaction of vomiting at a pie- eating contest, and to create the voluminous regurgitation, the effects supervisors used copious amounts of blueberry pie filling and large curd cottage cheese, which was pumped through a tube hidden under the actor’s shirts and taped to their cheek.
It took 5 stagehands pushing on a large plunger to get the right amount of upchuck (a power washer was originally used, but proved too diffused), leading into the gloriously gross comeuppance. Reiner was initially reticent to include the scene, but told Entertainment Weekly in 2. All the agonizing that I went through about whether or not to include it, and it turned out to be the biggest thing in the whole movie. Every year in Brownsville (Oregon. I’m very happy it’s remembered so well.”9. Cannibal Holocaust (Pig Slaughter)One of the most controversial films of all time, Cannibal Holocaust is notorious for featuring a number of real- life animal killings included in the film. And one scene, which featured the live shooting of a pig, proved so traumatic for actor Carl Gabriel Yorke that he kept botching a lengthy monologue.
It’s hard to blame him: after hearing the pig squealing it’s death throes in the background, he couldn’t gain his composure.