One of the worst beating scenes I've ever seen!!
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childers-3 — 11 years ago(August 11, 2014 10:32 AM)
The beating/stabbing in "A Cry for Help: The Tracy Thurman Story" was so brutal and awful, I can't watch this movie again - EVER. This was on TV - not in a rated-R movie.
Also, in The Sopranos episode "University", Ralph Ciferetto beat a 20 year old pregnant woman to death. It was horrible. I think he must have punched her in the stomach 10 times. Brutal.
"Well, make something up!"/RG -
the_spiral — 10 years ago(May 11, 2015 10:04 PM)
It's so funny you bring this up, because I first saw Casino on TV as a teenager and I happened to tune in for this scene and was TOTALLY freaked out by it (even though it was probably censored) to the point where I refused to watch it for several years. I'm not exactly a wimp with movies, I've seen Salo and a bunch of other "extreme" films, but certain things just get to me and I'm not sure why. I remember the scene mentioned in Boys Don't Cry upsetting me a lot, and I had to FF the rape in Girl with the Dragon Tattoo as well. I think stuff like that just hits me harder as a woman.
But in general I've been way more disturbed by TV deaths. I cried like a baby when Wallace died on the Wire (not really gory, just sad and upsetting to see a child such a cruel death) and of course Oberon's death on GoT was on another level. Never seen someone's head crushed to smithereens like that before, let alone such a likable character. And I seem to recall Oz had some memorable nastiness as well. Actually HBO is responsible for like 90% of my nightmares lol -
Etxpeme — 10 years ago(February 23, 2016 12:23 PM)
Off the top of my head: Fight Club (where they beat Jared Leto's character), American Psycho (Jared Leto's the victim again -such a beautiful face to disfigure-), Pan's Labirynth (one peasant gets his head bashed in with the back of a pistol), Green Street Hooligans (a guy get his head smashed in a fistfight), Drive (Ryan Gosling beats a guy and then smashes his head on the floor with his foot), ClockWork Orange (I love the rape scene), Reservoir Dogs (a man is being tortured to the sound of 70s music), Untouchables (DeNiro smashes -I love the word- a guy's head with a bat and some guy has his head blown of in an elevator), Kick Ass I and II, Tarantino's films.
Don't misinterpret me, I don't like violence for violence's sake (I hate horror gory films). In my opinion, those are all great films and the violence is justified. And after watching all of them, Casino is very soft.
Also, the violence in most of those films isn't very graphical either, you just see fake red blood (the color of which is far from resembling the actual color of blood btw). I don't know, I guess after all this Marvel movies and other action films where people get hit and they don't bleed, not even a little bit They even got me to believe that you had to hit someone really hard in the face for them to bleed but then I got to see a little bar fight and I realized it was all a lie. And now I'm tired of the ''fakeness'' of it all. If you have to include violence let there be blood.
But, most probably, I'm a minority and I'm sure they won't change their PEGI ratings for me. -
Interlepos — 9 years ago(April 26, 2016 07:21 PM)
Watched it again right now. Yes, it's brutal. Even though you know it's actors, just acting in front of a camera, laughing between takes even knowing that this still makes you sick in the stomach. Masterful film.
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NikolajCostas1005 — 9 years ago(June 26, 2016 10:07 PM)
Yep, I've seen a lot of the scenes people are alluding to in this thread but the baseball bat scene in Casino beats (npi) them all, not so much due to the gore or explicit level of violence but the overall direction of the scene. There's no music and gradually see Dominick get pulverized - AND bloody-faced Nicky feebly pleading with them to spare his brother. All of it together just feels so realistic and we feel like Nicky - being forced to watch something so horrible and never-ending close up.
The fact that it's Joe Pesci (and I'll forever see him as Harry from Home Alone) is also a little upsetting to me.
I notice your English gets better when you want something. -
cwholdsworth — 9 years ago(September 05, 2016 07:38 PM)
I could watch the cornfield beating scene a thousand times before I would ever watch Sailor's beating of Bob Ray Lemon at the beginning of Wild at Heart again. I have a high tolerance for movie violence but I refuse to watch that scene ever again.
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twelveboar — 9 years ago(October 17, 2016 04:11 AM)
Lots already mentioned here: Wild at Heart, Killing them Softly, Irreversible.
I would add Layer Cake and Gangster No.1 to this- a bad beating and a torture/murder respectively, both filmed from the victims' POV, which makes it all the more difficult to stomach.
There also a much underrated film called The Debt Collector, which has a couple of very heavy scenes and stars Billy Connolly, of all people, playing a former thug trying to get his life together. Worth a watch, but not for the faint hearted.