But the point of this list is to describe horror flicks that had a lot of nudity-almost to the point where genres blend and you’re not really sure whether it’s a horror film, a short film for sex, or a porn film. After that, it was Hellraiser (24 scenes over 10 movies) and Wrong Turn (17 scenes, seven movies).
#MURDER SET PIECES RAPE SERIES#
The same study found that of all horror franchises, the Friday the 13th series had the most nude scenes-39 spanning 12 movies. Skin, a website that analyzes nudity in movies, found the horror movies typically have less nudity than other genres such as action, comedy, crime, and drama.
#MURDER SET PIECES RAPE FULL#
The defining example of DVDBeaver being full of shit.Horror fans tend to associate horror movies with gratuitous nudity, but a study by Mr.Some quick thoughts on Audition (1999) on Blu-ray.More Awards and the Shit-Eatin' Palance Award.Some quick thoughts on The Texas Chainsaw Massacre.What does Breck Eisner mean to Horror, if anything?.Some quick thoughts on Halloween 2 (2009) or: My P.The Little Known Alternate Cut of Murder-Set-Pieces.More H2 thoughts after Zombie's thoughts.This one doesn't even deserve "quick thoughts".More Baffling Video Dealer Behavior or you aren't.Much Thanks and BD's Horror Blogger Awards.The Gates of Hell Announced for Blu-ray!.Some quick thoughts on Angel Heart (1987) and The.Of course, the director's cut is the proper way to experience Murder-Set-Pieces and it can still be found for sale online ( here for example), but those genuinely smitten either by Palumbo or this film might want to track down a cheap copy of Lionsgate's DVD as a curious supplement. The screenshots to the right reflect the "new" footage on the R-rated disc. I haven't memorized the director's cut so there might actually be more.
Every snippet described on the IMDB's alternate versions page is included. Not entirely, despite the Lionsgate release scorn of globs of vileness that might have resulted in the studio facing lawsuits from traumatized soccer moms and their kids who mistakenly rented it, the resulting R-rated cut is actually a hybrid version that includes unique footage only seen in Palumbo's theatrical release and workprint.
According the IMDB's trivia page, an unbelievable 23 minutes of cuts took place. The studio submitted the film to the MPAA to be slashed down to an R. I can remember first hearing of this and immediately advising to buy Palumbo's disc because there was no way in hell Lionsgate would have the balls to throw this one uncut in stores nationwide. If this is your thing, the director's cut of Murder-Set-Pieces is the sickest American-made horror outing of the previous decade by a good margin.īut then, after Palumbo self-released his director's cut onto DVD, the feature ended up in the hands of Lionsgate for their own straight-to-DVD release. I did "like" the flick more the last time I persevered through the director's cut and what largely saves this abhorrent exercise ( aside from the impressive splatter from Toe Tag) is the strange, cold feeling of being a fly-on-the-wall as we follow The Photographer ( Sven Garrett) gorily tear Vegas's female population a new asshole. On one hand, the flick would probably be revered as something of a rough exploitation classic nowadays if produced back in the early '80s, but at the same time all the varied violence seems crammed in merely to guarantee everyone who sees it will at least find one aspect deeply offensive. I'm still out on Palumbo's creation myself. Not to mention Palumbo apparently being a dick, known for fighting on message boards over even slight criticism and allegedly selling gifts received from those in the industry on eBay. A 2004 sickie packed with extreme misogyny, wanton slaughter, disgusting rape, and even child murder that divided opinion and pissed off many of the actors involved upon seeing the finished product. Many of you fellow gorefreaks are probably already aware of Nick Palumbo's infamous Murder-Set-Pieces. Still not feeling too great, so I'm going recycle a little something I posted way back on Film Talk for the sake of keeping the word out there for anyone interested as this tidbit doesn't seem widely addressed.