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Official Discussion: Bone Tomahawk [SPOILERS] Discussion. Disclaimer: This is a discussion thread. Any comments which show that the user has neither seen nor intends to see the movie will be removed. Synopsis: After a man's wife is kidnapped, four men go to save her and find that many horrors await them. Director: S. Craig Zahler.
Then they lift him upside down and just start hacking into his groin area. The muffled sounds of the sharpened bone tomahawk slicing through the soft flesh and bones, along with the bloodcurdling screams of the victim of unimaginable pain is just bonechilling. And it doesn't let up either. Cutting through the bone, the guts and eventually ...
Thoughts on Bone Tomahawk (2015) Hey, this is my first post here! Ok, so recently I decided to watch Bone Tomahawk, a horror/western movie directed by S. Craig Zahler and it was... quite a ride. The story itself is simple, and the movie is just going to point A to point B, with some eventual trouble in the middle.
This movie does a "reverse avatar" on the noble-savage stereotype of Native Americans. Where Avatar gives its protagonists native coded symbols to borrow the concept of humans being honorable environmentalist with connection to their world, Bone Tomahawk codes their antagonists in native symbols to borrow the scalping angry savage that cannot be reasoned with part of the stereotype.
ADMIN MOD. Bone Tomahawk (2015) .."That" Scene.. First off, if you haven't seen this movie..I'm glad you can still visit caves without a shotgun. But if you're like the rest of us who have seen "that of which cannot be unseen", or, in plain English, Deputy Nick's role as the human wishbone in Bone Tomahawk, you know what I'm talking about.
Now you see Bone Tomahawk is a reconstructionist western. It rebuilds the genre, again not realistic, after decades of deconstruction. You see the classical western often viewed Native Americans purely as adversarial creations and not people. Monsters in essence by proxy of racism. This deconstruction made the western less and less palatable ...
I saw the rather fascinating Bone Tomahawk recently. In it, a group of troglodytes kidnap a few people, leading to a suspenseful chase across the arid country in search of them and their victims. During the film, when the troglodytes are close, we often hear this eery screeching noise.
The scene in Terrifier is the perfect example of that kind of sequence done wrong. That scene is just gore for the sake of gore that's infamous for how "extreme" it is and nothing more. Bone Tomahawk on the other hand packs a genuine emotional wallop because the filmmakers manage to make the viewer actually care about the characters.
In the movie Bone Tomahawk, Arthur has managed to get near the hillside cave of the "troglodytes" and says to himself something like, "This is where it capsized." He may have been in a dry river bed, and maybe he sees the wreck of a boat, but his is not clear to me at all.
The ending of Bone Tomahawk. I just watched Bone Tomahawk, it’s really good, I was scared seeing the 130 minute runtime but it moved at a good pace. The third act was disappointing imo, I expected the rescue party to go into the mountain, see how the cannibals lived, duke it out there. But instead it was just a room (why would they keep their ...