The Green Inferno -2013- !!exclusive!! Info
The film follows Justine (Lorenza Izzo), a naive college freshman from New York. Eager to find a cause and impress charismatic activist Alejandro (Ariel Levy), she joins a group of student protesters. Their mission, led by the intense leader Jonah (Sky Ferreira), is to chain themselves to bulldozers and halt the destruction of a remote Peruvian village by corporate developers.
Their plan? A non-violent disruption. The reality? The protest is a catastrophic failure. While attempting to return to civilization, their small plane crashes deep in the uncharted jungle. Justine awakens to find most of her peers dead or severely injured. The survivors soon realize they have crashed directly onto the territory of the very tribe they came to "save." The Green Inferno -2013-
The tone oscillates between earnest political commentary and lurid shock cinema. Roth’s influences—Italian cannibal cinema of the 1970s and ’80s, American splatter films, and ethnographic horror—are on full display: lush jungle cinematography suddenly gives way to violent close-ups, grotesque practical effects, and long, uncomfortable scenes of ritual. The film invites discomfort rather than soothing audiences, making it an unapologetic entry in the modern shock-horror canon. The film follows Justine (Lorenza Izzo), a naive
Through its portrayal of the cannibal tribe's resistance against colonialist forces, the film serves as a scathing critique of patriarchal societies and the exploitation of colonized peoples. The film's influence can be seen in a number of subsequent horror films, cementing its place as a significant work in the horror genre. Their plan
A savage, problematic, and undeniably effective piece of grindhouse horror. Not for the faint of heart or weak of stomach.