The Anthropophagus Beast  

From The Art and Popular Culture Encyclopedia

Jump to: navigation, search

Related e

Wikipedia
Wiktionary
Shop


Featured:

The Anthropophagus Beast is a 1980 Italian language horror film, directed by Joe d'Amato and co-written by d'Amato and George Eastman, who also starred in the film.

The film also starred Tisa Farrow, Saverio Vallone, Margaret Donnelly, Vanessa Steiger, Mark Bodin, Bob Larsen, Simone Baker, Mark Logan, Rubina Rey and Zora Kerova.

Contents

Plot

A group of tourists arrive on a small Greek island, only to find it almost completely deserted. It seems that the only person still alive there is a blind girl who does not know what has happened to the rest of the town, but is terrified of a man who she describes as smelling of blood.

As members of the group disappear or are murdered by a mysterious man, the survivors search for clues as to what is going on. They find a diary, which tells the story of a man who was shipwrecked with his wife and child. In order to survive, the man was forced to eat his dead family. This act drove him insane and he went on to slaughter the rest of the island's inhabitants.

In the film's most notorious scene, the killer strangles a pregnant woman while pulling the fetus from her womb and then devouring it (in reality the fetus was a skinned rabbit covered with fake blood).. The effect proved so convincing that the filmmakers were attacked and questioned as to whether they really extracted a human fetus from its mother's womb. In the end, the killer is dispatched by means of a pick axe to the stomach, but before he dies he attempts to devour himself, chewing violently on his own intestines before finally dying.

Background

The Anthropophagus Beast was director Joe d'Amato's first 'straight' horror film, having previously made erotic horror films such as Emmanuelle in America and Erotic Nights of the Living Dead. D'Amato and co-writer Luigi Montefiori were long-time associates, and Montefiori often had lead roles in d'Amato's films, usually under the pseudonym of George Eastman.

In the documentary Totally Uncut 2 d'Amato stated that the film was solely made for foreign markets; both the director and Montefiore claim that even though the film did very well in other countries it was a flop in Italy. Montefiore also revealed that while he had a good time making the movie he has never liked it.

Alternate Titles

As well as The Anthropophagus Beast, the film was known in by several other titles, including:

  • Antropophagus
  • Anthropophagus The Beast
  • The Grim Reaper (original U.S. title, censored)
  • Man Eater
  • The Savage Island
  • Anthropophagus: The Grim Reaper (DVD re-release title)

In the UK, the film was placed on the DPP list and classified as a video nasty in 1984. This was due mainly to the infamous fetus-eating scene. In reality, the fetus was a skinned rabbit. This did not prevent the film from being falsely described as a snuff film, a story which was even featured on BBC News. It is now available in the UK in a cut form, under the title The Grim Reaper.

Follow-ups

  • D'Amato followed up this movie with a pseudo-sequel, Absurd (1981, also known as Zombie 6: Monster Hunter).
  • An unofficial remake was created by German horror director Andreas Schnaas in 1999, entitled Anthropophagus 2000.




Unless indicated otherwise, the text in this article is either based on Wikipedia article "The Anthropophagus Beast" or another language Wikipedia page thereof used under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License; or on research by Jahsonic and friends. See Art and Popular Culture's copyright notice.

Personal tools