![]() ![]() The parents of the girls then exact revenge. It tells the story of two girls who are kidnapped, raped, tortured and murdered in the woods. ![]() The story is based on a classic Swedish arthouse film The Virgin Spring by Ingmar Bergman. ![]() Wes Craven's 1972 movie had to be censored to play in the likes of the US, the UK and Australia because of its scenes of graphic violence, rape and humiliation. It showed in art film circuits, but was banned in Spain, Australia, New Zealand, Malaysia and Norway as well as briefly in the UK. He agrees to appear in what he thinks is an art film but turns out to be a murderous film with pedophilic and necrophilic themes. ![]() A Serbian Film tells the story of a semi-retired porn star who needs to work to make money. A Serbian Film - 2010Įven the premise of this movie is enough to upset stomachs. Malcolm McDowell starred in Stanley Kubrick's dark British horror film that shocked theatre-goers in the 1970s. The British movie was released in America after Kubrick removed 30 seconds of explicit sexual footage which got it an R rating in theaters. Released in 1971, Stanley Kubrick's dystopian crime film was banned in several countries, yet still received four Oscar nominations.Īmong the countries to ban A Clockwork Orange were Ireland, Singapore, South Africa, Brazil, Spain, South Korea and parts of Canada. Some movies on this list look tame by today's standard of shock and horror in movies-not A Clockwork Orange. Telling the story of American tourists who encounter depraved sexualized torture in Europe, due to its graphic content and shocking themes, Hostel: Part II was banned in Germany and New Zealand. Hostel: Part II - 2007Įli Roth's first Hostel movie didn't satisfy everyone, especially the tourism boards of Slovakia and the Czech Republic where they were based, but the outrage was even greater for Hostel: Part II. Judge for yourself with these 15 horror movies that were deemed too disturbing to watch. Most of the movies on this list were eventually released in the United States, but were banned by film classification boards and governments in other countries. Read more Two in Five Americans Believe Ghosts and Demons Exist ![]()
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