All 20 Movie titles include:
- Sal¨° o le 120 giornate di Sodoma (Salo or the 120 Days of Sodom)
- I Spit On Your Grave (also known as Day of the Woman)
- The Last House on the Left
- Caligula
- In the Realm of the Senses (Ai no Korīda, 愛のコリーダ, lit. Bullfight of Love) (Fr: L'empire des sens)
- Caligula
- Irr¨¦versible (2002, France)
- Baise-moi (Rape Me)
- Anatomy of Hell (French: Anatomie de l'enfer)
- Ma Mere
- 9 Songs
- Romance (Romance X)
- Ken Park
- Devil in the Flesh
- The Beast (La Bete) (1975)
- The Raspberry Reich
- A Woman With Red Hair
- The Baby of Macon
- Caligula II
- Deep Throat
- Lies
Salo le 120 giornate di Sodoma (Salo or the 120 Days of Sodom) is a
1976 film by Italian director Pier Paolo Pasolini, based on the book The 120
Days of Sodom by the Marquis de Sade.
I Spit On Your Grave (also known as Day of the Woman) is one of the few
movies directed by Meir Zarchi. The movie was controversial enough to earn an X
rating upon its original release in 1978, and earned Zarchi a reputation without
him having to make a second film.
Marketed as a mainstream film, it is one of the most gruesome movies in the
exploitation film genre.
Camille Keaton won a Best Actress award for her role in this movie at the 1978
Catalonian International Film Festival in Spain.
The Last House on the Left is a 1972 horror film written and directed by
Wes Craven and produced by Sean S. Cunningham.
Caligula: The rise and fall of the notorious Roman Emperor Caligula,
showing the violent methods that he employs to gain the throne, and the
subsequent insanity of his reign - he gives his horse political office and
humiliates and executes anyone who even slightly displeases him. He also sleeps
with his sister, organises elaborate orgies and embarks on a fruitless invasion
of England before meeting an appropriate end. There are various versions of the
film, ranging from the heavily- truncated 90-minute version to the legendary
160-minute hardcore version which leaves nothing to the imagination (though the
hardcore scenes were inserted later and do not involve the main cast members).
In the Realm of the Senses (Ai no Korīda, 愛のコリーダ, lit. Bullfight of
Love) (Fr: L'empire des sens) is a Franco-Japanese film from 1976
directed by Nagisa Oshima.
Caligula is a 1979 film directed by Tinto Brass, with additional scenes
filmed by Bob Guccione and Giancarlo Lui, about the Roman Emperor Gaius Caesar
Germanicus also known as "Caligula". Caligula was written by Gore Vidal and
co-financed by Penthouse magazine, though the script underwent several re-writes
after Tinto Brass and Malcolm McDowell found Gore Vidal's interpretation of the
infamous Emperor to be unsatisfactory. The producers were Bob Guccione and
Franco Rosselini. The film was budgeted at $17-million and ended up grossing $21
million in its initial release; afterward, the film became a long-time hit on
home video market. The production advertised itself as "the most controversial
film in history. Only one movie dares to show the perversion behind Imperial
Rome..."
It stars Malcolm McDowell as the Emperor and chronicles his rise and fall as the
brief ruler of the Roman Empire. The film focuses heavily on Caligula's
infamously deviant sexual practices, as well as those of his contemporaries.
Irr¨¦versible (2002, France) is a film written, directed, edited, and
photographed by Gaspar No¨¦. It is considered to be one of the most disturbing
and controversial films of 2002, due to its explicit on-camera depiction of rape
and murder.
The film has also been compared to the films Memento and Peppermint Candy, as
well as the play Betrayal, since all use a reverse chronology.
Baise-moi (aka Rape Me) is a novel by French author Virginie Despentes,
first published in 1999. A film based on the book, and with the same name, was
released the following year. The film, directed by Despentes and actress Coralie
Trinh Thi, received intense media coverage because its graphic mix of real
rather than simulated sex and violence was on the limit of that allowed by
censors in various countries around the world.
Anatomy of Hell (French: Anatomie de l'enfer) is a 2004 film by Catherine
Breillat. The film was adapted by writer/director Breillat from her novel
Pornocratie. The expicitly sexual film stars Amira Casar as "the woman" and
Rocco Siffredi as "the man".
Me Mere: Based on George Bataille's posthumous and controversial novel:
When his father dies, a young man is introduced by his attractive, amoral mother
to a world of hedonism and depravity.
9 Songs is a 2004 British film, directed by Michael Winterbottom. The
title refers to the nine songs played by eight different rock bands that
complement the story of the film.
The film was controversial on its original release due to its sexual content,
which included unsimulated footage of the two leads having sexual intercourse
and performing oral sex as well as a scene of ejaculation. The release sparked a
debate over whether scenes of unsimulated sex artistically contribute to the
film's meaning or overstep the border into pornography. Nonetheless, the film
received an 18 certificate from the British Board of Film Classification and
became the most explicit mainstream film to be so rated in that country. Despite
intense lobbying to keep it out of cinemas, the film was passed uncut at R18 for
general release in New Zealand by the Office of Film and Literature
Classification. In Australia, the Office of Film and Literature Classification
gave the film an X rating which would have prevented the film being shown
theatrically and restricted sale of the film to the Australian Capital Territory
and Northern Territory. The OFLC Review Board later passed the film with an R
rating, although the South Australian Classification Council raised the rating
back to X in South Australia.
Romance (Romance X) is a 1999 French movie written and directed by
Catherine Breillat. It stars Caroline Ducey, erotic actor Rocco Siffredi,
Sagamore St¨¦venin and Fran?ois Berl¨¦and. The film contains several sex scenes
that appear to have been unsimulated, especially the famous scene showing
Caroline Ducey's coitus from behind with an erect Rocco Siffredi (who is not
brought to completion, though).
Ken Park is a controversial 2002 film with a screenplay adapted by
Harmony Korine from stories by Larry Clark, and directed by Larry Clark and
Edward Lachman. The film revolves around the abusive home lives of several
teenage skateboarders, and is a story of violence, alienation and teenage sexual
experimentation, set in the rural town of Visalia, California.
Devil in the Flesh is an Italian film released in 1986 and directed by
Marco Bellocchio. An adaptation of Raymond Radiguet¡¯s novel Le Diable au corps,
the film stars Federico Pitzalis as a high school student who falls in love with
an older woman (played by Maruschka Detmers).
The film is notable as one of the first mainstream European films to show an
unsimulated sexual act, namely a brief scene showing Detmers performing fellatio
on Pitzalis. Detmers is on record as having regretted doing this scene, stating
it has overshadowed her other work. Two versions of the film exist - an R-rated
version that omits the scene, and an unrated version that includes it (this
package). In the late 1990s, the Canadian cable network Showcase Television
accidentally broadcast the uncensored version (albeit at a late hour), which
resulted in a number of viewer complaints.
The Beast (La Bete) (1975): Banned for 25 years in England, Walerian
Borowczyk's notorious Gallic shocker is a one-of-a-kind experience, not for the
easily offended. Lisbeth Hummel plays a young American heiress about to marry
the son of a marquis. She finds the diary of an 18th-century woman (Sirpa Lane),
who wrote about her own sexual fascination with a creature that is half-bear and
half-wolf--and lusts after her! WARNING: Contains explicit scenes; RECOMMENDED
FOR ADULTS ONLY.
The Raspberry Reich is a pornographic film which explores what LaBruce
calls "terrorist chic", cult dynamics and the power of homosexual expression
[1]. It is about a contemporary terrorist group who set out to continue the work
of the Red Army Faction (RAF), also known as the Baader-Meinhof Gang. The group
consists of several young men, and a female leader named Gudrun (after Gudrun
Ensslin). All of the characters are named after original members of the
Baader-Meinhof Gang, or other revolutionaries such as Che Guevara.
A Woman With Red Hair: At his working place, Kozo and his colleague
gangrape the boss' teenage daughter. Then, on the highway, he picks up a
red-haired woman walking on the road back to his home. She ends up staying the
night. Later, the woman reveals that she has left her husband and son, but
refuses to divulge her name. On the other hand, the boss' daughter informs
Kozo's colleague that she is pregnant. They decide to elope but, before that, he
demands Kozo to let him have sex with the red-haired woman...
The Baby of Macon is a 1993 film written and directed by Peter Greenaway
starring Ralph Fiennes, Julia Ormond and Philip Stone. This is considered by
many to be the most controversial film in Peter Greenaway's filmography.
Critics, in general, disliked the film, and it never received a proper
distribution in North America, playing occasionally in cities like New York and
Los Angeles. Some have called it Greenaway's most disturbing work.
Caligula II: The rise and fall of the notorious Roman Emperor Caligula,
showing the violent methods that he employs to gain the throne, and the
subsequent insanity of his reign - he gives his horse political office and
humiliates and executes anyone who even slightly displeases him. He also sleeps
with his sister, organises elaborate orgies and embarks on a fruitless invasion
of England before meeting an appropriate end. There are various versions of the
film, ranging from the heavily- truncated 90-minute version to the legendary
160-minute hardcore version which leaves nothing to the imagination (though the
hardcore scenes were inserted later and do not involve the main cast members).
Deep Throat: Linda, frustrated that her hugely energetic sex life leaves
her unsatisfied, seeks medical help. The doctor informs her that the reason for
her problem is that her clitoris is mistakenly located at the back of her throat
- but there is a very simple remedy, which the doctor, and various other men,
proceed to demonstrate...
Lies: A conscious exploration of fantasy and flesh. The director talks
about the novel upon which the film is based, we see the crew at work, the
actors talk about what's going on. Y, a schoolgirl of 18, chooses her first
lover (rather than wait to be raped, as were her two older sisters). After phone
sex with J, a sculptor who's 38, they begin an affair that, by the second
meeting, includes spankings as foreplay. J brings a suitcase full of rods,
hoses, and wires; Y gathers sticks to bring. Y's brother discovers the affair.
J's wife, studying in Paris, calls him to join her. Will the lovers part? Will
the violence get out of hand? When do the lies begin?
Special note:
Price for this collection is $349.99 and this collection edition is a 20 DVD
set. This is official foreign release. The bottom line is: this 20 DVD
collection is
HARD TO FIND!
- Format: All Region Code, NTSC/PAL DVDs (All Region DVD player needed to play all 20 DVDs)
- Number of Discs : 20 DVDs
- Brand New sealed in factory box
- Language : English
- menu: English
- Subtitles : English/French/Chinese (on/off)
- Officially released Some foreign characters on covers.
20 World Forbid Movie Titles (click to enlarge):
