Eating Humans for Fun Season Special
When horror master Eli Roth takes over the direction, things get down to business. With his feature film debut Cabin Fever (2002), he has already shown that he has come to sweeten the eyeballs of his friends with hard gore effects. Three years later, he achieved an international hit with Hostel (2005) — which was no less brutal.
With GREEN INFERNO (2013), Roth takes on the cannibal film. A horror sub-genre in which explicit depiction of violence is a tradition. However, Green Inferno goes one step further, impresses with absolute uncompromise and shows things that would have made Deodato (RIP) & Co. pale.
The story revolves around a group of student activists who decide to travel to the rainforest to save an indigenous village from deforestation. But their mission takes a terrible turn when their plane crashes and they are captured by a group of cannibals.
Delicatessen, Feed Me, Green Ineferno, Little Shop or Horrors, and Ravenous are part of our season special “Eating Humans for Fun.”