Movie Review: The Green Inferno
Eli Roth returns with a helping of bloody confusion.

Female genital mutilation may be the final frontier in gore movies, and Eli Roth has now crossed it. The Green Inferno, Roth's first feature in eight years, begins with students gagging over FGM photos in a university lecture hall and then moves on to demonstrations of the practice in the primitive world of the movie. The demonstrations aren't graphic, but they're queasily close. Director Roth, who co-wrote the script, probably wouldn't bother defending these scenes (this is the man who gave us the Hostel movies, after all), and they're so pointlessly appended to the story that they function as little more than additional daubs in the picture's blood-soaked incoherence. Feel free to be offended, though.
The story is gore-flick simple: college kids meet cannibals in the Amazon jungle. The movie echoes genre classics like the 1980 Cannibal Holocaust (in which Amazonian atrocities also featured) and the 1964 2000 Maniacs (in which barbecued human was likewise on the menu).
The story begins, rather slowly, at Columbia University, in New York. Idealistic freshman Justine (Chilean actress Lorenza Izzo, Roth's wife) falls in with a group of self-righteous student protestors led by the charismatic Alejandro (Ariel Levy). He recruits her to join the group on a trip to Peru, where they will protest the despoliation of the jungle by American corporate interests (and, not incidentally, record their daring exploit for Internet streaming via cell phones). Justine has already noted that the cause most important to her is FGM, but she quickly sets that aside to sign up with Alejandro. Because he's cute, apparently.
The group flies to Peru and stages its protest at the corporate tree-clearing site. Then, on the way back, their little plane crashes in the jungle (a nicely managed action sequence) and the students are captured by an indigenous tribe adept at body-painting and blowgunnery. The natives paddle them upriver to a grim village festooned with piked heads and freshly skinned skeletons, and ruled by a frightful, one-eyed female shaman (Antonieta Pari). We're now on Roth's home turf.
Tossed into a wooden cage, the young adventurers despair of escaping (they can't get cell-phone service!). But they keep trying—and failing, in the most alarming ways. Limbs are hacked, eyeballs gouged, and roasted torso flesh ("My God, I can smell my friend being cooked!") is filleted with an expertise usually accorded whitefish at a deli.
Then three of the young women have their pants pulled down and a sharp stone knife run between their thighs (in carefully angled close-up). Later Justine is splayed out for special attention in this regard. Roth doesn't pretend there's any serious reason for showing us this stuff; he's just saluting the old-fashioned exploitation strategy of providing empty shocks of a sort that viewers can't easily obtain anywhere else. Somewhere, Herschell Gordon Lewis, at least, is smiling.
As usual, Roth leavens his gross-outs with humor. When one caged student is offered pork scraps for sustenance, she says, "I'm vegan." And we chuckle a bit when the caged youths manage to get their captors high on pot (don't ask how), which gives them the munchies, of course. But some of Roth's gags—especially the ones involving masturbation and explosive diarrhea – sail in out of nowhere and land with a deafening clank. And the movie's concluding scene, set back in the States, makes not the tiniest bit of sense.
The movie was shot in Chile and Peru in 2012, and has been confined to the festival circuit for the last two years. Its captivity should have probably continued.
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Ah, hipster torture porn. Who could of guessed Loder would give it anything less than the full five orgasm rating?
And who could have guessed that Jagermeister could screw up one's grammar?
http://watchmovieonlinestream......Inferno-88
Herschel Gordon Lewis lives here in South Florida. I saw him in the last year or so at a John Waters talk and at an arthouse theater showing of his 2000 Maniacs (1964) where he led the cinema crowd in singing the chorus to a rousing version of that picture's theme song "And the South is Gonna Rise again.. YEEHAW!" which he in fact wrote.
They kept name dropping him in some movie I watched years ago (Juno, maybe?) and I swore I'd watch something of his to see what the fuss was about, but still haven't gotten around to it.
"Female genital mutilation may be the final frontier in gore movies, and Eli Roth has now crossed it."
OK, I suppose I *might* watch this movie...if the terrorists who kidnapped me force me to,
But I would tell the terrorists plainly, "this time you've gone too far."
I love classic movies, but I do not think that this gives me such an experience like the Maniacs and Cannibal Holocaust. This is an imaginative concept because I didn't find any such classic from this movie rather than technical as well as modern strategies. It has some sexually imposed scenes which makes the audience to arouse. I believe that a movie should keep everything within limitations and nothing should go wrong in order to get the audience attention. This is what classical movies do.
These Pirates of the a Caribbean movies are getting less and less appealing.
*polite golf clap*
Tangent: I finally saw the latest addition to the Mad Max franchise. 97% on the Tomatometer.
The Shawshank Redemption sits at 91%. Forest Gump sits at 72%. Lone Survivor 75%.
Now, I'm not exactly panning the movie, but there really is nothing there. It is simply a chase scene. The "storyline" is every bit as thin and superfluous as the story line of a Ron Jeremy classic. I suppose they are grading on a "you get exactly what you expect you are going to get" curve, so therefore the consensus. But it sure ain't no masterpiece.
I was amazed at how bored I was watching 'Fury'. I mean, I like explosions and car chases and stuff, but this had me a "meh" by the 30 minute mark.
Heartily agree - the Road Warrior beats it by a mile.
There is nothing thin about a Ron Jeremy classic.
What I find truely remarkable is not the film or the review, but that there's still a market for his dreck.
For a while I thought Eli Roth might be done with directing because he's too busy playing Spock in the new Star Trek movies.
Just because all crackers look alike...
STEVE SMITH likes
Is that Steven Tyler?
What does it indicate when a filmmaker makes a torture porn movie and gives his wife the starring victim role?
I imagine it makes a divorce attorney somewhere very happy.
Didn't South Park already do this one?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eUCAfbNL0Oo
Loder keeps talking about how senseless the.violence is, but from his own description, he makes the female genital mutilation sound as if it were integral to the plot.
A bunch of social justice warriors, one who is particularly upset about female genital mutilation, go the jungle to protest the incursion of capitalism and its destruction of primitive cultures--and then they're abandoned to what a primitive culture is really about. That the hypocrite is ultimately subjected to female genital mutilation would bring that full circle.
South Park had an episode like that where the kids and their SJW teacher went to the Amazon to try to save the rainforest only to realize how much they hated the rainforest and the savages who lived there. The primitive tribe members dressed their SJW teacher up like a cheerleader--and she finally lost it--her sympathy for the savages.
This movie sound like the same plot. It sounds like the same plot. I haven't seen the movie, but from Loser's description, it sounds like FGM is central to the plot.
I haven't seen the movie, but from Loser's description
That's mean.
That's autocorrect!
I would never refer to Loder that way!
Damn millenial phones, thumbs...
Ugh!
*scratches The Green Inferno off list of movies to ever watch*
I never got into snuff films. It's the main reason why to this day I've never watched The Passion of the Christ either.
It reads as somewhere between an interesting satire (on a theme that's been done plenty, but could always be done again) and Nudist Colony of the Dead with natives substituting for the (un)dead. I might like to see it if I were more into movies these days.
I only have one question: why did you review this piece of crap?
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