The 9th entry for the Horror Movie Marathon Madness essay contest is from Chris Gusta and is entitled 'The Problem with Cannibal Holocaust'. Enjoy!
Once, in
college, I was walking around with a female art student who I had a thing for,
and we were discussing different movies we had seen and it came around to
talking about horror and exploitation films, which I loved and love, and she
most apparently did not. The young woman
in question went on a tangent to say that she had an ex-boyfriend once who had
“this disgusting poster over his bed.” She described it as a woman impaled
naked on a large pole. I, of course,
offered up the title of the movie, Cannibal
Holocaust, and received a disgusted frown at the fact that I knew what she
was talking about. She did not go out
with me again.
The
thing that lingers on from this story is that it is really difficult to defend
a movie like Cannibal Holocaust, or
really, to a non-gore lover, any patently gory, and exploitative film of this
kind. People who do not like gore will
argue that it’s disgusting filth, and of course, in almost every way, they are
right. That some of us enjoy disgusting
filth is a hard thing to use as an excuse for a movie that some would also call
culturally insensitive, as in fact many cannibal movies could be called.
Cannibal
Holocaust, in particular, has an advantage, at least, of a sort-of meta-reality
quality to the usual Western “gawking at tribal custom” that comes with
watching a cannibal movie. It still
portrays the “natives” as savage and ignorant, but turns their ignorance into a
point of victimization. Modern culture,
as in reality, invades their home, abuses their people, and desecrates their
religion. Unlike in reality, the natives
get their revenge in particularly gruesome ways, but here-in, to me, lies one
of the central problems with the film.
For a
large amount of the movie, the tribal people, whose cannibalism is one of the
tantalizing draws of the film due to its horrific and sickening nature, are
almost completely helpless. When Yates
and crew terrorize them, they huddle about looking scared and confused. This might be a natural reaction to a group
of people burning your village and randomly shooting people in the tribe, but
why they would not put an immediate stop to this abuse is beyond understanding.
While
the disrespect of nature and of human life shown by the Yates film crew is
sensationalized and a little over the top, the film itself has a strange
relationship to nature that is on an almost similar level. I remember when first watching the film, I
was most disturbed by a scene in which Felipe, the group’s guide, randomly
grabs a small animal that has run out of the brush, cuts off its head, and
throws it back. If the scene is not
real, I would think the movie should have received an award for special
effects. In terms of the criticism that
the movie itself poses towards its own villains, this sort of bizarre real-life
violence is more shocking than much of the expected violence in the film. Several of the other animal deaths, while
still as grotesque, are at least not as gratuitous. The deaths of the turtle and the monkey,
which by modern standards should seemingly never be accepted in a film of any
kind outside of the nature channels, have a role in the film. However, the death of this one small creature
is more or less completely unnecessary.
While
the nature of extreme films is such that horrifying and grotesque imagery is
the whole point, as a fan, it is often important to be able to remind myself
that these things are not really happening.
In this way, Cannibal Holocaust
is despicable. I spent years trying to
convince the person I first viewed it with that the turtle scene was not
real. Upon learning that it was, I was
disgusted at my own watching of such a thing.
So, it is a somewhat hypocritical movie in a sense, both criticizing and
participating in a brutal form of sensationalism that, while fascinating, is
ultimately deeply troubling to watch.
1 comment:
I think the whole issue for me is that with the actual killing/mutilation of animals, it goes beyond being offensive into actually being twisted and wrong. It becomes what it was purporting to be against.
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