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IMDbPro

Subconscious Cruelty

  • 2000
  • 1h 32m
IMDb RATING
4.8/10
2.2K
YOUR RATING
Eric Pettigrew in Subconscious Cruelty (2000)
An anthology of horror, consisting of four segments all themed around gory subjects.
Play trailer1:52
1 Video
35 Photos
Body HorrorFantasyHorror

An anthology of horror, consisting of four segments all themed around gory subjects.An anthology of horror, consisting of four segments all themed around gory subjects.An anthology of horror, consisting of four segments all themed around gory subjects.

  • Director
    • Karim Hussain
  • Writer
    • Karim Hussain
  • Stars
    • Sophie Lauzière
    • Anne-Marie Belley
    • Brea Asher
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    4.8/10
    2.2K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Karim Hussain
    • Writer
      • Karim Hussain
    • Stars
      • Sophie Lauzière
      • Anne-Marie Belley
      • Brea Asher
    • 37User reviews
    • 22Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Videos1

    Teaser Trailer
    Trailer 1:52
    Teaser Trailer

    Photos34

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    Top cast23

    Edit
    Sophie Lauzière
    Sophie Lauzière
    • Woman On Slab (segment "Ovarian Eyeball")
    Anne-Marie Belley
    • Hand (segment "Ovarian Eyeball")
    Brea Asher
    • Sister (segment "Human Larvae")
    Ivaylo Founev
    • Brother (segment "Human Larvae")
    Eric Levasseur
    • Lover (segment "Human Larvae")
    Janis Higgins
    • Girl In Photo (segment "Human Larvae")
    • (as Janice Higgins)
    Nadia Simaani
    • Female Performer (segment "Rebirth")
    Anna Berlyn
    • Female Performer (segment "Rebirth")
    Nancy Simard
    • Female Performer (segment "Rebirth")
    Sean Spuruey
    • Male Performer (segment "Rebirth")
    Scott Noonan
    • Male Performer (segment "Rebirth")…
    Mitch Davis
    • Male Performer (segment "Rebirth")…
    Christopher Piggins
    • Businessman (segment "Right Brain…
    Martin Sauvageau
    • Drunk In Bar (segment "Right Brain…
    Annette Pankrac
    • Secretary (segment "Right Brain…
    Vince Sheffield
    • Man On Television (segment "Right Brain…
    Karen Wiener
    • Female Hand (segment "Right Brain…
    Sylvain Rivard
    • Subliminal Body (segment "Right Brain
    • (as Vainvard)
    • …
    • Director
      • Karim Hussain
    • Writer
      • Karim Hussain
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews37

    4.82.1K
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    Featured reviews

    5marcopop

    Shocking, yes, but what else?

    This was definitely the most graphically disturbing film I've ever seen. Apparently, the sole purpose of the film is to shock and outrage people (according to the Stockholm Film Festival booklet), and I guess it does, but it doesn't really go any further than that. Or does it? I get the feeling that Karim Hussain has something to tell us, but it doesn't get through very well. I understand the reason for showing the things no-one dares to show, and I think that's good. But it is not presented very well, so people will not get the picture. The last section of the film is clearly a statement against American double standard of morality, and the modern mans loss of spirituality, and it is also the most intentionally apparent section.

    The 'sound design' is great, very reminiscent to Lynch's Eraserhead. The music on the other hand, is most of the time inappropriate. The middle part of the film where people are indulging in an orgy with Mother Earth, is so badly scored the scene becomes silly, which is a shame. Hussain should have chosen music in the vein of Ligeti and Penderecki for a film like this (like Kubrick did).

    If you want to see a shocking film that is dead serious all of the time, go for this one. Not for everyone, though. Or maybe it is?
    7itrevorallen

    Desecration & Demoralization from a poet.

    The movie is poetic. Much of the scenery is cleverly chosen and represents imagery related to creation and the mockery of this world (or more so human nature). Opinions will vary, but to me this justifies the brutal "extreme" nature of the film, something many others lack. It helps that the imagination is not all which is utilized to find purpose in the atrocities taking place On screen, instead your offered a guide who narrates his own thoughts and concepts has he creates these acts of desecration. His acts of self perceived ultimate trauma.

    Cons: there is a major lack of plot going on. Also quite boring at certain points (ie 15+ minutes of people having sex with the bleeding earth) Pros: this lack of plot is further depiction of human nature. Also the gore was very high quality and believable.

    Going With a 7, but it can be easily understood how many are tempted to rate this a 3 or lower. Not the genre for everyone.
    5BA_Harrison

    Interesting art-house horror with plenty of WTF moments.

    A gory, low budget, art-house horror with scenes of extreme nastiness, Subconscious Cruelty is not an easy film to watch for several reasons: it is extremely 'symbolic' (some might say pretentious); it has no standard narrative; and it features very unsettling imagery. It is, however, well directed and edited, and features some amazingly realistic effects and a pretty decent score.

    Subconscious Cruelty starts as it means to go on, with a bizarre short segment entitled Ovarian Eyeball in which a naked woman on a table is sliced open; from her wound, an eyeball on an optic nerve is produced. It makes no sense (to me at least), but is certainly visually arresting.

    And so the weirdness continues, with a second 'story', Human Larvae, about a guy who wishes to make a mockery of the miracle of birth by killing his sister's newborn child as it is leaving the womb. This one is without a doubt the vilest story I have ever seen committed to celluloid and should be seen only by those with a very strong stomach.

    Part three, Rebirth, is less intense, with a bunch of naked people rolling around in mud, fellating tree branches and shagging pools of blood! I quite enjoyed this bit after the gruelling nature of Human Larvae.

    The final segment, Right Brain/Martyrdom, fuses religious symbolism with female nekkidness and gore, and is a shocking slice of sacrilegious depravity guaranteed to upset Christians everywhere.

    I can't say that I enjoyed director Karim Hussain's debut, and would hesitate recommending it to pretty much everyone I know, but I imagine that it will definitely have a cult following amongst those people who prefer to delve into cinema's weirder output, such as the films of Lynch, Jodorowsky or Miike.
    9EVOL666

    Ambitious and Intriguing "Art-House/Gore" Film

    First off - this film will not be for everybody. There are scenes of extreme graphic violence and "disturbing" images that by their nature alone will turn off many possible potential viewers. Obviously from the reviews on this board - SUBCONSCIOUS CRUELTY has divided those that have seen it. I'm among the ones who liked it very much for several different reasons. I feel this was a very ambitious (and quite competently pulled off...) undertaking for a bunch of 18/19 year olds with no budget and little experience. I think that each aspect of the film - the direction, the acting (though the character's performances are more likened to stage or free-form performance because of the nature of the film...) the production, the FX, the score/sound design - all are far superior to many films I've seen that exceed these kids budget and experience ten-fold. I honestly haven't been this impressed with an "art-house" style horror film since Nacho Cerda's GENESIS...

    First off - I'm not going to pretend to understand and/or grasp all of the graphical content in this film - but knowing that this wasn't a straight-narrative type of film when I went into it, I wasn't disappointed with how it played out. SUBCONSCIOUS CRUELTY is 4 relatively short vignettes that all sort of revolve around the theory of right brain/left brain lust/anger/psychosis vs. restraint/compassion/"normalcy". To very briefly give a synopsis of each "chapter":

    OVARIAN EYEBALL basically just has a naked girl who has an eyeball cut out of her abdomen. I'm sure it's symbolic of something - I don't think I was paying that much attention at that point and this one blows by pretty quick.

    The next "episode" - HUMAN LARVAE - is a nihilistic, horrific, genuinely creepy story of a guy who's both in love with and repulsed by his pregnant sister, who gives into his growing psychosis which leads up to the shocking conclusion of that particular chapter. HUMAN LARVAE is the best of the bunch in my book, and will probably get under your skin. The dead-pan narrative dialog accentuates the growing tension as you know something horrible is going to happen - but you're not quite sure what it is. Do yourself a favor and if you are interested in seeing this film - don't do too much research on it. Come into it with an open mind and an iron stomach and I think you be pleasantly surprised, especially with this particular episode.

    REBIRTH has a bunch of people in a field screwing the ground and blowing trees and stuff. Apparently an "arty" interpretation of the rape of the earth or something to that effect. Not bad, but this one is pretty short too and I sorta missed the point on it...

    And RIGHT BRAIN/MARTYRDOM seems to be about religion and religious hypocrisy and also along with HUMAN LARVAE, has some of the "hardest" images/messages of the whole feature...

    OVARIAN EYEBALL isn't anything to write home about, mainly because of it's very short running time but does make a decent segue into the insanity to come...and REBIRTH is also kind of short and not quite as thought provoking, but HUMAN LARVAE (especially) and RIGHT BRAIN/MARTYRDOM are so off-the-wall and well done that they more than make up for the other parts. I think the main reason that I liked this one so much is that as "shocking", "repulsive", "violent" and "excessive" as it is, it is also done very beautifully and you can tell this was a real labor-of-love from those involved. Nothing about the film feels cheap or rushed, and even if the content isn't completely decipherable, it's undeniably original - and that alone up's the points some in my book. Not that every "weird art-house" film that has an unintelligible plot should be praised for it's "originality", but SUBCONSCIOUS CRUELTY is the type of film that I do think I'll watch a few more times in the near future to see what other interpretations I may gain from it. Again, this film is ABSOLUTELY not for everyone - with some VERY extreme scenes of gore, murder, rape, incest, sacrilegious imagery, etc...that is definitely there to shock the viewer into taking a harder look at this film. I have to say it worked for me, and I'm anxiously awaiting the Hussain/Cerda collaboration that is rumored to come next. Check this one out if you have the stomach for it - 9.5/10
    3claudio_carvalho

    Gruesome, Gory, Sick and Disturbing

    A couple of days ago, the censorship did not allow the exhibition of "A Serbian Film" in Rio Fan Festival 2011 in Rio de Janeiro. A friend of mine mentioned that "Subconscious Cruelty" was another polemic film and I decided to watch it.

    "Subconscious Cruelty" is indeed gruesome, gory, sick and disturbing, and one of the nastiest and pointless films I have ever seen. The film is divided is segments and it seems that the only intention of the director is to shock the audiences with a confused narrative and disconcerting impressive images. Paradoxically, the music score is very tender and beautiful.

    Ovarian Eyeball - In the first segment, a naked woman is sliced by a sharp blade and an eyeball is removed from her belly. This surrealistic short is absolutely senseless.

    Human Larvae – in this second segment, a deranged man that hates his sister that is pregnant kills her newborn offspring and she during the delivery. This short is one of the sickliest films I have ever seen.

    Rebirth – in this third segment, a group of naked people rolls around mud and blood in another pointless segment.

    Right Brain/Martyrdom – in this last incomprehensible segment, there are the visible intention to offend the Christians with religious symbolism associated with gore and sex.

    Considering that I did not understand three out four segments, I really did not like this film. My vote is three.

    Title (Brazil): Not Available

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Took around six and a half years to make
    • Alternate versions
      Director's High Definition Remastered Restored Version
    • Connections
      Referenced in In the Belly of the Beast (2001)
    • Soundtracks
      Eaten By Trees
      By David Kristian

      Copyright David Kristian All Rights Reserved

      Website: www.davidkristian.com

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    FAQ12

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • August 21, 2001 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • Canada
    • Official site
      • Infliction Films
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Bilinçaltı Zulüm
    • Filming locations
      • Longueuil, Québec, Canada
    • Production company
      • Infliction Films
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Budget
      • CA$100,000 (estimated)
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 32 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Stereo
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.66 : 1

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