The Green Inferno -2013- is not a good film in the traditional sense. It has wooden acting, a predictable plot, and a tone that swings from sophomoric to savage. But as a piece of transgressive art , it is a triumph. It asks one simple, terrifying question: What if the noble savage isn’t noble at all? Your answer to that question will determine whether you turn it off in disgust or watch it three times in a row.
Roth argues that the film is a dark comedy. The activists are cartoonishly self-righteous—one character brags about being "vegan for five years" before being eaten. Their slogans and social media posts do nothing to stop the machetes. Roth’s thesis seems to be: "You want to save the natives? What if the natives don’t want to be saved, and what if they eat you?" By making the victims unlikeable, he forces the audience to confront uncomfortable questions about white savior complexes. The Green Inferno -2013-
However, if you are sensitive to depictions of sexual assault (there is a scene involving a potential circumcision/rape threat), animal cruelty (the film uses animatronics, unlike the real animal killings in Cannibal Holocaust ), or extreme gore against indigenous peoples, you should strictly avoid it. The Green Inferno -2013- is not a good