

Salo, or the 120 days of sodom is a film that leaves no stone of cruelty or offensiveness unturned! Based on a very old novel Salo delves into the deepest depths of depravity and madness. Haha WOW I have to say this film has to go up as being one of the sickest films ever made! Made by a director of high aclaim, so this was a surprise to see.

You want gore? Here it is in all its untamed glory! Any good review must include a negative too, but i really can't think of one, this film can easily offend I guess, but judging by the cover you wouldn't buy it if you were! (there is a more tame front cover available if you want to trick your nan into watching this) LOL Having watched real autopsys myself I can safely say this is the closest you can get to it.

naaaaasty! The producer even went through the effort of talking to pathology student and teachers to get the most out of the FX, it succeeds. you may see what this could lead to! The film is in spanish but fear not my friends there is no talking in this film, i guess that Nacho Cerda felt he had put you through enough without some lengthy dialogue too! In short this film is. The film takes place in a morgue and the bodies are so true to life its distrubing! In the 1st quater of an hour you are exposed to sounds and visuals unlike any other you may have experienced, the bones cracking and organs splashing about could be hard for even the most seasoned and desensitized gore lover! But just as you've just about gotten used to all these visuals and noises you are then faced with a new senario, a pathologist, a dead female and an empty morgue for the last 15 minutes. Ok again what we have here is another lie by me, this is not an 80's or 70s horror but this is done by a director worthty of mention and this is a film that is more than worthy of a mention! Ive only just allowed some of Nacho Cerda's films into my life and I must say this guy does not dissapoint! Aftermath is a short film (aprox half an hour) but squeezes so much mentality into that half hour it's unbelievable! As demonstrated on the cover, this is a film with no moral boundries.
