![]() Unusually for an Italian movie, most of the actors spoke in English throughout. #WATCH CANNIBAL HOLOCAUST UNCUT TRIAL#Cannibal Holocaust was eventually banned in numerous countries (the unofficial estimate is around 50, including the UK and its native Italy), and such was the realistic nature of the on-screen deaths that Deodato was actually arrested and held on trial under suspicion of murder of the four main actors – a charge he was only able to drop after getting all four actors to appear at the courtroom. ![]() It read: “Dear Ruggero, what a movie! The second part is a masterpiece of cinematographic realism, but everything seems so real that I think you will get in trouble with all the world.” The story goes that when Sergio Leone – the legendary Italian director of Once Upon A Time In The West and The Good, The Bad And The Ugly – first saw Cannibal Holocaust, he felt compelled to write a letter to his friend Ruggero Deodato, the film’s director. Despite this, the review still features descriptions of these scenes and as such those with a weak stomach may wish to just give this film their own score of zero and move on. Note: Other then the official film poster above, the rest of the images in this review have deliberately been chosen to hide some of the film’s gorier, more offensive scenes. You know, did you ever think of the Yacumo point of view? That we might be the savages?” The Yacumo Indian is a primitive and he has to be respected as such. Civilised, isn’t it? That’s what Alan thought and that’s why he’s dead. PROFESSOR MONROE – “Ah, yes, that’s typical western thought. ![]() The more you rape their senses the happier they are.” ![]() TV EXECUTIVE – “Today people want sensationalism. Starring: Robert Kerman, Francesca Ciardi, Perry Pirkanen, Gabriel Yorke, Luca Barbareschi ![]()
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