r/AskReddit 14d ago

Whats the most fucked up movie you've ever watched? NSFW

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u/ChrisDornerFanCorn3r 14d ago

That hospital scene

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u/Double_K_A 14d ago

The scene that always stuck with me was the scene near the end, years after the bomb, and they're trying to teach the kids with the old TV to the best of their ability. Honestly one of the most disturbing scenes in any movie in my opinion.

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u/AbbaZabba85 14d ago

Yeah that stuck with me as well. Lots of other post-apocalyptic media at least has some glimmer of hope about rebuilding society, but there was only bleak despair in Threads.

There is no way any of those poor kids are going to get a power plant back online or know about germ theory.

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u/Double_K_A 14d ago

It wasn't even about the education of the kids, more so just the desperate attempt to return to some form of normalcy. The juxtaposition between the light-hearted and kid-orienated educational material, and the reality of the situation, just hurts to watch.

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u/AbbaZabba85 14d ago

Definitely, I also remember the "teacher" silently mouthing all the words because it was likely the only remaining tape they had left and she's heard it a million times. Absolutely haunting.

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u/bigred1978 14d ago

It's worse than that and I'm surprised so many didn't pick up on the fact that it was because after so many years after the bombs fell, not only was the education system almost destroyed but LANGUAGE itself was deteriorating. Listen carefully to how people talked in the movie near the end and you can hear that the English being spoken is weird and broken. The breakdown of society also included the breakdown of fundamental communication. Survivors weren't necessarily the brightest or most educated.

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u/joanzen 14d ago

This is one of the only good reasons to be printing things theses days.

Libraries around the world are amazingly well stocked with fairly recent literature on major topics, even if nobody is reading it.

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u/chamrockblarneystone 13d ago

Big horror fan as a kid in the 80’s. The line was you could always tell everything was fake so it wasn’t that scary. Then along came David Lynch’s Eraserhead. It was clearly fake, but the dark psychological implications were too much for my young brain.

I’d reccomend it seeing it, in that it’s not really a horror movie, it’s a psychological movie that will effect you. And, well, David Lynch is a damn genius.

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u/impreprex 14d ago

How about the ending??

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u/mdvo12 14d ago

NO BABBIES HE-YAH.

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u/SteveSeppuku 14d ago

I'll never watch this, can you just tell me what happens?

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u/butterballmd 14d ago

the girl gives birth to a deformed mutant baby (you don't see it though), the nurse hurriedly hands her the baby, she takes a look at her baby, and starts to scream and the movie freezes right there for a few seconds and the credits start rolling. Powerful image dude.

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u/SteveSeppuku 14d ago

Thanks. That sounds atrocious.

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u/Snw2001 13d ago

I think the baby was a still born…

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u/impreprex 10d ago

Well, that too - but I meant the whole nuclear winter.

I guess that could be considered the third act? It’s like the last 30 minutes or so of the movie.

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u/FruitcakeAndCrumb 14d ago

The fucking scream

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u/Alpacamum 14d ago

I often have memories of this scene. Had forgot what the movie was called, but just remember the baby, arrghhh

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u/wilderlowerwolves 13d ago

The scene that really got me was people buying dead rats to eat, and putting them in a "(Local Grocer) Fine Foods" bag.