124 Comments
Commenting has been turned off for this post
author
Oct 10·edited Oct 10Author

I just woke up to find twice as many comments as usual on a new Weekly Question. I seem to have stuck a chord. I'll dive into these as soon as I get a moment. I'm off to go whale watching today with my kids - both of which will probably vomit repeatedly through the experience. Talk about disturbing...

Expand full comment

Requiem for a Dream was deeply disturbing.

Expand full comment
Oct 10Liked by Cole Haddon

Same with me....definitely one and done.

Expand full comment
Oct 10Liked by Cole Haddon

DANCER IN THE DARK. A brilliant film, but to see Bjork's poor character relentlessly punished for her unselfish acts is too much for a revisit. After I saw it in theaters I called my mother and to tell her I loved her.

Expand full comment

My god, this movie. Once while cooking and listening to music in the kitchen I became so overwhelmed with sadness my h came into the kitchen to find me sobbing uncontrollably. Only when he turned off the music to talk to me did I realize it was the song 107 Steps that was killing me (again).

Expand full comment
Oct 11Liked by Cole Haddon

So harrowing.

Expand full comment

Seven. I don't even like the number 7 any more ....

Expand full comment
Oct 10Liked by Cole Haddon

but..."what's in the box???"

Expand full comment

Yeah, that one was just bad. No redeeming features.

Expand full comment

Natural Born Killers. Excellent performances, but too much so for me.

Interesting to see how many commenters land on movies that depict excessive violence. There are many ways to disturb an audience in filmmaking; violence is only one.

Expand full comment

Henry: Portrait of a Serial Killer and Requiem For a Dream both come to mind.

Expand full comment

Oh, yes, Requiem For a Dream. Wish I'd not seen it, or that I'd stopped after the first 30 minutes.

Expand full comment

Same here

Expand full comment
Oct 10Liked by Cole Haddon

Irreversible. Meaning it's irreversibly imprinted in my brain. IYKYK

Expand full comment
author

IRREVERSIBLE is a film I'm very glad I've seen and will rewatch again in the future, but it's very harrowing. I tend to think films like this deserve witnessing. If 1 out of 5 women can survive rape, I can watch this to at least try to vicariously understand some of the horror of it and its consequences. I feel the same about holocaust films. But I'm probably unique in this regard.

Expand full comment
Oct 17Liked by Cole Haddon

I agree with you on this. I think if a film is well made and important then it outweighs any disturbance it might bring. Those feelings you experience are part of the messaging.

Expand full comment

I refuse to recommend it. Another difficult movie with the same actress is Malena.

Expand full comment

Oh, yeah, this was not a recommendation. I do remember Malena. I'd rather watch it.

Expand full comment

Requiem for a Dream.

Nope.

Expand full comment
Oct 11Liked by Cole Haddon

Good question. I think that I may be unusual in my taste in movies, bc so many films listed here are some of my all time favorites: Clockwork orange was intensely brilliantly done. Kubrick’s depiction of this nightmarish story stuck with me sm that I had to go read the book (a good book too, the author’s knack for vernacular language is Shakespeare level imo.) I loved seeing Requiem and Pi (I say I love them, but idk if love is an accurate word. they’re dark as night and spooked the life outta me.) Aronofsky films inspired me to read Hubert Selby Jr too. Lynch and Kubrick are 2 of my favorites; even tho they highlight the dark underworld beneath the fragile veneer of human existence, that’s an inquiry I find compelling and intriguing bc it makes me ask questions. I do have difficulty with Natural Born Killers. although I adore Woodie and Juliette, I fear that Stone’s film can be interpreted as a glorification of gun violence (I would never say don’t watch tho, bc I think examining America’s deadly affair with guns is a worthwhile investigation. But, an examination into the sickness of gun violence must be done with caution to avoid turning the serial killers into f-ing gods or mythical heroes; I fear Stone may be crossing that line? Lars Von Trier can be difficult, but I adore Melancholia, Dogville, Europa. Dancer in the dark was phenomenal, even though it made me sob nonstop after I left the theater. Boys don’t Cry had a similar impact on me; I cried uncontrollably at the ending. I think if a film gets under my skin, makes me think about new ideas, or asks tough questions then imo it’s worth the time and emotional gut punch. Kids was one that’s pretty painful to watch. But I’d still rewatch in order to keep learning and reexamining a hard subject over time. Long story short, Idk if I can say I’d never watch a film again. But I think Gun Violence/Serial Killer movies can sometimes cross a line into bad taste, and I’d say they warrant extreme caution.

Expand full comment

A Clockwork Orange. The ultra-violence haunted me

Expand full comment
Oct 10Liked by Cole Haddon

Bad Lieutenant with Harvey Keitel

Expand full comment
Oct 10Liked by Cole Haddon

Julie Taymor's Titus. After viewing, I couldn't sleep for 2 weeks.

Expand full comment

Like many others, the first thing that came to mind was Requiem for a Dream. But who knows, I might brave it again. I remember the first time I saw Eraserhead as a college freshman, I thought it was the most horrifying film I'd ever seen. Two years later when I saw it again, I thought it was one of the funniest films I'd ever seen. As we change, so do films.

Expand full comment

I had that exact same reactions to Eraserhead at nearly the same ages!

Expand full comment
author

Yes, I'm quite surprised by how REQUIEM has scarred people. It's dark, but I didn't know it was so widely traumatizing.

Expand full comment
Oct 10Liked by Cole Haddon

Old Boy

Expand full comment
author

Got to work with Park Chan-wook. I started thinking, "I want to give this guy a hell of a twist ending." Within a week I decided, "Yeah, I'll never top OLDBOY, so why try?"

Expand full comment
Oct 10Liked by Cole Haddon

This, ☝️without question. Brilliant but…

Expand full comment
Oct 10Liked by Cole Haddon

Jonathan Glazer's Zone of Interest. As brilliant as it was, I honestly do not think I can put myself through that again.

Expand full comment
author

I can't stop thinking about THE ZONE OF INTEREST. It was...hard. But I think I have to rewatch. I need to understand how it was so perfectly made.

Expand full comment

I'd see it again, but I wouldn't go out of my way to. It is haunting on so many levels.

I can't imagine what it's like in the editing room for any of these films. We may see it one time, but the editor and director (and other post people) probably see the film 100 times.

Expand full comment
Oct 10Liked by Cole Haddon

This is an easy one:

Grave of the Fireflies (火垂るの墓, Hotaru no Haka) by Isao Takahata.

NEVER.

Again.

Never.

Expand full comment

It's been in my to-watch list for more than a year now and... I'm scared (don't tell me more. But also I may never watch it, haha)

Expand full comment
Oct 10Liked by Cole Haddon

It's not even scary. It's just bleakly sad. And you have to watch it once in your life.

Expand full comment

Yes, I know it's not scary, I'm the one who's scared of the heartbreak, based on what I've heard from others. Thanks for the nudge. I need to be brave. But there is already so much heartbreak.

Expand full comment
Oct 10Liked by Cole Haddon

You're right, ma'am. That's the definition of life. So much heartbreak.

Expand full comment

I also couldn’t finish The Zone of Interest. It wasn’t that it was gory or difficult to watch but it effectively made you perceive the world through the eyes of Nazis and I found it so upsetting that I was struggling with this for over a day. I decided to stop watching it because of this.

Expand full comment
author

I found it a necessary watch because we are surrounded by people who could easily be coaxed into committing such atrocities.

Expand full comment

Unfortunately, all of us can be coaxed into committing atrocities or looking the other way when others commit them. There are very few who can hold to values that give them the ability to defy these situations. We have the capacity for evil as well as good within us.

Expand full comment
author

I think this is true to a point, for whatever it's worth. But that's a conversation for another day...

Expand full comment
Oct 10Liked by Cole Haddon

1974 Texas Chainsaw Massacre. No thanks. Don’t need to see it again.

Expand full comment

Probably the one I was in 😅 it was very hard to watch.

Expand full comment

Tideland.

I was rattled for days. I am normally a huge Terry Gilliam fan, but someone close to him needed to take him aside and tell him it was a very bad idea.

Expand full comment
Oct 11Liked by Cole Haddon

Yes, awful.

Expand full comment

Bad Boy Bubby. I think I’ve watched it twice, the second time to show it to a friend and confirm it is a great movie, but so disturbing and odd. The first 20 minutes are the most claustrophobic I’ve felt watching anything.

Runner up: The Brown Bunny, disturbing and mostly pointless.

Expand full comment
Oct 10·edited Oct 10Liked by Cole Haddon

I'm pretty tolerant of disturbing, but I felt like I needed a long shower after watching 'Requiem for a Dream'. That one spelunks the sewer.

I did watch 'Kids' a bunch of times, but I understand that's beyond most people's tolerances as well.

I turned "Ichi the Killer" off.

Expand full comment

I’m a horror fan and I found the movie Cannibal really disturbing. And the Human Centipede movies shouldn’t be movies, such hatred of women I’ve never seen in a film before.

Expand full comment
Oct 10Liked by Cole Haddon

Sophie’s Choice and The Boy in the Striped Pajamas. I know not only one.

Expand full comment

There are films I wouldn't watch again because I thought they were bad. It never occurred to me not to watch one because I found it disturbing. In fact, those are some of the best.

Expand full comment

Tusk.

I have a few, but that was the first one that's not in the comments.

Expand full comment
Oct 10Liked by Cole Haddon

Itchi the killer so violent I could barely get through it. Never again!

Expand full comment

"Angel Heart", with Robert De Niro and Mickey Rourke, for some reason.

Expand full comment
Oct 10Liked by Cole Haddon

Schindler's List

Expand full comment
author

I rewatch this every five years. I turn all the lights off, make sure nobody can bother me, and sink into the horror. I wish it were required viewing in American high schools, but apparently the Holocaust is no longer required knowledge.

Expand full comment
Oct 17Liked by Cole Haddon

Good point. My daughter watched in HS but we haven't watched it together. She said mom, all I have to do is see what and who Trump & MAGA surround themselves with to get it. 🫶🏻

Expand full comment
Oct 17Liked by Cole Haddon

It was so painful to watch and I wish it was required viewing as well. A tremendous film but my heart can't take another viewing. It's etched in there.

Expand full comment
author

The interesting thing is, with repeated viewings, the humanity of the victims begins to usurp the attention given to Amon Goeth and the other Nazis. Not that you should return to it. I just point this out because the film does change as the shock (slightly) diminishes.

Expand full comment
Oct 10Liked by Cole Haddon

💯

Expand full comment
Oct 14Liked by Cole Haddon

I didn't think I could finish TEXAS CHAINSAW MASSACRE, but eventually went back and finished it. Now, I think the first half is brilliant, suggestive filmmaking, while the part I originally turned off feels like a cartoon.

THE TIN DRUM is the one that keeps coming to mind. I saw it college, and I don't remember much about it, but it was enough to not want to see it again. That said, I still enjoyed it.

The two that I've been warned of and will never watch are Pasolini's SALO and CANNIBAL HALOCAUST.

Expand full comment

Easy: Zodiac. The park murder is one of the worst things, maybe the worst that I’ve ever watched. Hated it then, hate it now, hate that it’s a real thing. Wish I’d never watched.

Expand full comment

Grave of the Fireflies was the first film that came to mind. I have a strong stomach but seeing children, even if they're only animated, struggling to survive in Japan at the end of WWII made it an extremely difficult to watch. I visited Hiroshima and the Peace Memorial Museum when I was a child and it deeply impacted me so that undoubtedly colors my view. But Grave of the Fireflies is a genuinely heartbreaking film.

Expand full comment
author

You're the second or third person in the comments to bring this film up. I've never seen. Now I need to fix that...

Expand full comment
Oct 11Liked by Cole Haddon

Dear Zachary is one I’ll never watch again. Disturbing and so incredibly sad.

Expand full comment
author

Yeah, this is up there for me. I'll never rewatch it.

Expand full comment

Requiem for a Dream, Irreversible, The Elephant Man, Cronenberg's The Fly... I avoid films that have bleak or atrocious subject matter. I don't see the point. I know people are FUCKED UP behind closed doors, so don't open that door and expose me to humanity at its worst. Irreversible was the film of ths type I ever plan on seeing.

Expand full comment
author

YOU WON'T REWATCH THE FLY?! I watch that every two years like clockwork...Halloween classic.

Expand full comment

Angel Heart freaked me out. I’ve not seen many of the movies mentioned in this thread, but I know what to avoid now. Haha!

Expand full comment

I have never seen this film but I’ve heard Come and See is profoundly disturbing.

Expand full comment
author

It is.

Expand full comment

Requiem For A Dream caused me to have my first panic attack. Horrible film.

Expand full comment

The Edge. Can't do that bear scene ever again. On a lighter note: Message in a Bottle. I'm still pissed.

Expand full comment

Snowtown. Fantastically made film. But never again.

Expand full comment

Probably either Martyrs (2008) or Snowtown (2011). I own both and will probably watch them again sometime to appreciate the technique, but man, they're brutal. I can also appreciate Funny Games (1997), but I don't need to sit through that 10-minute shot again.

Expand full comment

Lars von Trier's 'The House that Jack Built.' I found it gratuitously disturbing with no real story arc that engaged me enough to watch that trainwreck. I could not finish it. Dillon's preformance was wonderfully creely. But, not enough to keep me watching.

Expand full comment
Oct 11Liked by Cole Haddon

'Dancer in the Dark' and 'Triangle of Sadness' (for different reasons). I couldn't watch the middle section of the latter - except secondhand through the expressions on my husband's face.

Expand full comment

"Leaving Las Vegas", "Last Exit to Brooklyn", and possibly "Rashoman", though I suspect my adoration of Kurosawa will break me at some point.

Expand full comment
Oct 10Liked by Cole Haddon

I struggled to think of an answer for this. There aren’t many films I would be unprepared to revisit because I found them too disturbing. I think perhaps I tend to avoid films I genuinely think would be too much - I’ve yet to watch Audition, for example. I know very little about it but I just get the sense I might not like it. I’ve never watched Sophie’s Choice because I find the premise horrific.

The most violent reaction I have ever had to a film was in response to the anime sequence detailing Lucy Liu’s back story in Kill Bill. I was pregnant at the time which may have had something to do with it but I’ve never had the urge to revisit it.

Expand full comment
Oct 13Liked by Cole Haddon

I actually went and watched Requiem For A Dream after seeing it come up so often in these comments. I can see why people find it disturbing but I actually thought it was an excellent film with a lot to say. I won’t immediately be jumping in for a second viewing though - it’s a lot! I also watched Kinds Of Kindness last weekend and I would imagine that is also a film people might shy away from. I think its messaging is less clear and it was hard to watch in places but honestly, I can’t stop thinking about it.

Expand full comment
author

It does not leave you...for a long...long...time.

Expand full comment
Oct 10Liked by Cole Haddon

I also found Cabin Fever utterly repugnant. I think it is a film with no redeeming features. It was just nasty for nasty’s sake, and not even original. Not sure if I would choose not to watch it again because it was disturbing, or just plain bad!

Expand full comment
Oct 10Liked by Cole Haddon

Two for the road and who’s afraid of Virginia Woolf

Expand full comment

Cats.

Expand full comment
author

Well played.

Expand full comment

Hahaaaa

Expand full comment
Oct 10Liked by Cole Haddon

The Ascent (1977) and Quiz Show.

Expand full comment
author

QUIZ SHOW...but why?

Expand full comment

Well, it's not disturbing, but it's so anxiety-inducing that while I think it's excellent, I can never watch it again.

Expand full comment
Oct 10Liked by Cole Haddon

Dawn of the Dead

Expand full comment
author

Which version?

Expand full comment
Oct 12Liked by Cole Haddon

2004. Totally creeped me out

Expand full comment

I am not writing down my title, because I do not want to make anyone curious enough to check it out. I watched 20 seconds of it and that was enough

Expand full comment
Oct 10Liked by Cole Haddon

Psycho and Frenzy. Two Hitchcock films I can admire, yet never want to see again (as opposed to all of his other films).;

Expand full comment