What movie that you have seen, outside of the horror genre, left you feeling une!


Question: Jesus Camp.


Answers: Jesus Camp.

Boys Don't Cry. God.. that movie is disturbing.

Also: Requiem for a Dream.

The Passion of The Christ.

No Country for Old Men....real bloody film, but a great one nonetheless

The first Saw movie.

Bent

It was far too much for me to handle.

Elephant

The Woodsman.

topic: Child Molestation

Idlewild. Creepy at the end

American Me, its scary because its basically how gangs and violence will never end. and its Sad

Kids.

Lot's of uncomfortable truths about teens in there, especially the sex scenes.

the ring

2 girs 1 cup or 1 girls 1 finger u can find them online 4 free

World Trade Center...right before the end credits it gave the numbers of people who died in the 9/11 attacks. You walk out of the theater feeling like you're leaving a funeral.

super size me

made me not want to eat mcdonalds for like 2 months

I really hated Pulp Fiction

Aristocrats...the one with all the comedians. Not to be confused with AristoCATS.

Most vulgar, disgusting movie you will EVER see. And to see that Bob Saget is probably the most vulgar comedian in comedy.

But its actually really hilarious........

Salo, 120 Days of Sodom

http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0073650/

The Passion of The Christ
Da Vinci Code (thought provoking anyway)
Brokeback Mountain (HUH????)

saving private ryan

"Saving Private Ryan"...a real horror movie.

I have this movie on video and it still has the same affect on me.
Apocalypse Now

loose change 2 ND edition

Videodrome - not exactly a horror film.

Bad Boy Bubby, it was filmed in Port Adelaide (South Australia).

Anyone who has seen this will never feel the same *shudders* quite disturbing.

But a good movie to show the cycle of mental illness in one person and how it can affect others.

MUST SEE! :p

Jonestown: The Life and Death of the People's Temple

An American Experience documentary. Very disturbing.

Requiem For a Dream.....

Of course, any Holocaust movie is full of horror. The sad thing is, that it is Non-fiction. The horrible things the Nazis did to the Jews is enough to make anyone uneasy.

Requiem for a Dream~Hands down, this is the most disturbing, haunting and frightening movie perhaps because it shows that addictions can happen to anyone, whether it's a young rich girl, happy-go-lucky youths with plans, or an older woman. It takes people we learn to like and shows us the nightmare of total destruction of dreams and hopes.

The Glass House aka Truman Capote's The Glass House~This might be the most powerful TV movie ever made, focusing on two people entering a corrupt prison system: Alan Alda as the gentle professor whose rash act ends up killing a man; and Kristoffer Tabori as a 17-year-old sentenced for possession of marijuana. It's a chilling film, with brilliant acting from a strong cast, set in a real prison with many of the prisoners playing roles.

Bully~This one is based on a true story about a group of teenagers deciding to kill one of their own. Perhaps it wouldn't be as shocking to those in the same age group, but I found it distressing, bleak, disgusting, alarming and very sad.

The Day After~TV miniseries about a nuclear war~~This one pulls no punches, showing what the aftermath would be like: slowly dying people scrabbling for some form of survival in a ruined land. It doesn't take a science fiction approach; it just shows us what could have happened during the Cuban Missile Crisis and what could happen even today. I worked with a man who served in a missile base during the Crisis; he said that the most frightening moment in his entire life was when he saw the silo covers open and the missiles move into position. He said that what he wanted most at that time was to leave and go to his family for he was certain time had run out for us. So, "The Day After" is especially hardhitting.

Miracle Mile~This one actually gave me nightmares, which is exceedingly unusual, though it's milder than "The Day After". It would be a good companion piece with a TV movie that was so real that it alarmed many people, just as the "War of the Worlds" radio program had: "Special Bulletin". Show a mini-marathon of these two AND "The Day After" and... No, it would do no good. They'd still want to hang on to all of those weapons.

The Town That Dreaded Sundown~based on unsolved real-life murders by someone dubbed The Phantom Killer in the 1940s in Texarkana (twin citties that overlap the Texas and Arkansas border)~an inspiration for "Friday the 13th"//This one ran at drive-ins and disturbed sleep for many moviegoers around 1977. *shiver*

no country for old men. i felt like i'd just survived a high-speed chase

Not one to get easily offended, the following left me with an uncomfortable feeling:
- IRREVERSIBLE
- HARD CANDY
- SALO: 120 DAYS OF SODOM
- CRASH (the David Cronenberg film)



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