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The Green Inferno

  • 2013
  • R
  • 1h 40m
IMDb RATING
5.4/10
53K
YOUR RATING
POPULARITY
2,054
1,557
Lorenza Izzo in The Green Inferno (2013)
A group of student activists travels to the Amazon to save the rain forest and soon discover that they are not alone, and that no good deed goes unpunished.
Play trailer2:16
5 Videos
99+ Photos
Folk HorrorJungle AdventureSplatter HorrorSurvivalAdventureHorror

A group of student activists travels to the Amazon to save the rain forest and soon discover that they are not alone, and that no good deed goes unpunished.A group of student activists travels to the Amazon to save the rain forest and soon discover that they are not alone, and that no good deed goes unpunished.A group of student activists travels to the Amazon to save the rain forest and soon discover that they are not alone, and that no good deed goes unpunished.

  • Director
    • Eli Roth
  • Writers
    • Eli Roth
    • Guillermo Amoedo
  • Stars
    • Lorenza Izzo
    • Ariel Levy
    • Aaron Burns
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.4/10
    53K
    YOUR RATING
    POPULARITY
    2,054
    1,557
    • Director
      • Eli Roth
    • Writers
      • Eli Roth
      • Guillermo Amoedo
    • Stars
      • Lorenza Izzo
      • Ariel Levy
      • Aaron Burns
    • 400User reviews
    • 253Critic reviews
    • 38Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 1 win & 6 nominations total

    Videos5

    Official Trailer
    Trailer 2:16
    Official Trailer
    Trailer
    Trailer 2:15
    Trailer
    Trailer
    Trailer 2:15
    Trailer
    Trailer #1
    Trailer 1:13
    Trailer #1
    Exclusive Featurette
    Featurette 1:13
    Exclusive Featurette
    Comic-Con Sneak Peek
    Promo 0:33
    Comic-Con Sneak Peek

    Photos305

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    Top cast33

    Edit
    Lorenza Izzo
    Lorenza Izzo
    • Justine
    Ariel Levy
    Ariel Levy
    • Alejandro
    Aaron Burns
    • Jonah
    Kirby Bliss Blanton
    Kirby Bliss Blanton
    • Amy
    Daryl Sabara
    Daryl Sabara
    • Lars
    Magda Apanowicz
    Magda Apanowicz
    • Samantha
    Sky Ferreira
    Sky Ferreira
    • Kaycee
    Nicolás Martínez
    Nicolás Martínez
    • Daniel
    Ignacia Allamand
    Ignacia Allamand
    • Kara
    Ramón Llao
    Ramón Llao
    • The Bald Headhunter
    Richard Burgi
    Richard Burgi
    • Charles
    Matías López
    • Carlos
    Antonieta Pari
    • The Village Elder
    Tatiana Panaifo
    Tatiana Panaifo
    • Village Girl
    Percy Chumbe
    • Guard Leader
    Clara Vázquez
    Clara Vázquez
    • Elder's Assistant
    • (as Clara Vazquez)
    Eusebio Arenas
    • Scott
    Sally Rose
    • Teacher
    • Director
      • Eli Roth
    • Writers
      • Eli Roth
      • Guillermo Amoedo
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews400

    5.453.3K
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    10

    Featured reviews

    7westsideschl

    Hungry

    If you were hooked (pun, ha ha) on the SAW movies then this film will be a good after meal snack. Yes, it was way overboard meal preparation and surprisingly realistic body snacks (in most cheap slasher/slice/dice films the prosthetics look artificial). Filming and acting were better than expected and sold me. Part of the reason the acting was somewhat capturing was the reality of a tropical Peruvian forest and the gusto in which the novice tribal people took to their roles. End result is nobody (including the eco provocateurs, tribes peoples, deforesters) came away smelling like roses, in fact, I would not have been displeased if, in the end, they were all munched upon by the resident leopard, vanquisher of evil. A couple of picky points that lowered the rating. First, every tribal member (no matter the age) was totally painted in red clay like pigment - all the time; not realistic given the humid conditions and time they would have needed to apply said substance. Second, all the women (and young girls) wore tops to cover their breasts which as we all know about tropical tribes - that just doesn't happen. Third, why would the village attack the construction armed mercenaries in a clearing given their stealth in a forest. Fourth, a lot of gaps foremost was Samantha's escape then we hear nothing more. Supposedly we are suppose to pay attention to tattoos. Suggestion: Watch again, afterwards, with cast commentary as it's more interesting than the film.
    4AlsExGal

    -Writer-director Eli Roth's homage to the Italian cannibal movies...

    ...Of the 70's and early 80's. A group of college students travel to a remote Peruvian location to protest a natural gas company's encroachment on an isolated, primitive native village. The students initial efforts are a success, but when their plane out crashes into the jungle, the natives aren't exactly thankful for the Americans' good deeds, preferring to butcher them and eat them.

    Roth skewers Western do-good-ism and liberal interference with foreign cultures, showing that even the best intentions can (literally) come back to bite them. The lead performance from Lorenza Izzo is good as the freshman student whose naivete is shattered in more ways than one. The rest of the cast just has to scream a lot. The violence is extreme, the blood copious, and the gore plentiful, but it becomes just a bunch of latex and Karo syrup after a while. I realized watching this that Roth seems to have specialized in the fear of the traveler in foreign lands, whether it's city folk in the deep country (Cabin Fever), Americans in Eastern Europe (the Hostel films), or South America (Aftershock and this movie). I would have given this a higher rating if it weren't for the nonsensical ending.
    7CleveMan66

    "The Green Inferno" is a bloody good movie, but not as bloody as you'd think.

    Think about the first time you rode some big, new roller coaster. As you waited in line and contemplated what lay ahead, your heart started beating faster. When you occupied your seat, and the picture in front of you began to move, you found yourself wondering what you had gotten yourself into. As you arrived at that first really scary moment, you resisted the urge to close your eyes, even as others around you were enjoying the thrill by thrusting their arms into the air. From that point, everything was a blur of shouts and screams, ups and downs, punctuated by brief moments of relative stillness. Then, suddenly, the ride ended. You were surprised how quickly it went by and, even though you felt a little queasy, you were glad you had the experience. You even may have commented that it wasn't as bad as you thought it was going to be, and that you kind of enjoyed it, all as you started to look forward to that next uncomfortable challenge. You just rode a scary new coaster, but might as well have been experiencing the uncomfortable thrill of a new Eli Roth movie… one like "The Green Inferno" (R, 1:40), for example.

    Personal feelings about graphically violent movies like the "Saw" franchise or Roth's own "Hostel" films aside, Roth's film "The Green Inferno" has a colorful history. The film traces its roots to cannibal-themed movies made in Italy during the 1970s and 80s. Roth's 2015 resurrection of this controversial horror sub-genre draws most directly from 1980's "Cannibal Holocaust", a movie so realistic that director Ruggero Deodato was arrested and put on trial for the murder of some of the actors in the film. (Deodato was only exonerated after he gathered all of his actors together for a TV show appearance and then demonstrated in court the special effects used to create the actors' "deaths".) That movie's working title was "The Green Inferno", a title which was eventually applied to the most gruesome scenes in "Cannibal Holocaust", specifically, the film within the film that purports to show footage from a missing documentary film crew. (This was the first use of the "found footage" or "pseudo-documentary" device, which was popularized in the U.S. by 1999's "The Blair Witch Project".) The title "The Green Inferno" was later also used as an alternate title for the 1988 sequel "Cannibal Holocaust II". Eli Roth filmed "The Green Inferno" in the jungles of Peru in 2012. His film opened at the 2013 Toronto International Film Festival. It was scheduled to be released in the U.S. in September 2014, but financial problems at the film's production company led to the film being pulled. Blumhouse Productions stepped in and the company's multi-platform releasing arm, BH Tilt, released "The Green Inferno" on September 25, 2015.

    After a brief scene of bulldozers flattening a rain forest in the Amazon, the narrative of Roth's cannibal film starts innocuously on the streets of New York City. College freshman Justine (Lorenza Izzo) and her roommate, Kaycee (singer-songwriter Sky Ferreira), are annoyed by the student activists protesting outside their window, but Justine is also intrigued. She attends one of the group's meetings in which their charismatic student leader, Alejandro (Ariel Levy), discusses their plan to save a village in Peru from being overrun by bulldozers paving the way for a natural gas mining operation. The students plan to dress as workers, chain themselves to trees and bulldozers, then live stream video from their cell phones to get the world's attention – and keep themselves from being shot by the armed mercenaries which protect the operation. Justine's dad (Richard Burgi), a lawyer at the U.N., expresses his reservations, but Justine goes on what she naively believes will be a weekend trip to save a native tribe from extinction.

    After landing in Peru, everything goes according to plan until their small plane crashes in the Amazonian jungle. Several of the students die in the crash, but the survivors are captured by the very tribe that the group was there to save. Not speaking any English or having had any positive experience with outsiders, the tribe considers their captives their enemy – and their dinner. One of the students is ritualistically killed by the village's elder / high priestess (Antonieta Pari) and then he is promptly dismembered, cooked and eaten. His friends watch in horror from behind the wooden bars where they are confined. What follows are more killings, more feasting and various attempts by the students to escape before the natives finish them off, whether for food, as punishment, or because of their brutal religious practices.

    "The Green Inferno" is a wonderful family movie. (Still reading? Just checking.) Actually, the film is more restrained than I expected. There's much less nudity than in previous Eli Roth movies and the gore, as disturbing as it is, could have been a lot more graphic, given what's happening on screen. Most of what's shown is on par with typical slasher flicks. You might even say that this is a relatively… tasteful cannibal movie. The story's solid, the acting's fairly decent for this genre and the film works as a horror movie, a thriller, a political commentary and there's even some dark comedy. Some call this kind of movie "torture porn". I think that's a stretch, but the more graphic scenes make it difficult to simply call this movie "entertaining" without qualifying the term. I judge movies based on how entertaining they are and how well they each accomplish their individual goals. Based on those measures, I'd have to say that, much like that big, new roller coaster, this movie isn't for everyone, but many will find it bloody good. "B+"
    5lnvicta

    Gore-hounds will be satisfied, people expecting a good horror movie won't be.

    The Green Inferno is a standard Eli Roth fare - gore galore, cannibalism, and occasional humor - set in the Amazon rainforest. The acting is terrible right off the bat, but thankfully it isn't an issue halfway through the movie when the body count starts up. The characters themselves are paper thin, only about 3 of which are given actual personalities while the others are just fodder for the natives.

    The premise of the movie is disturbing and will sound appealing to most horror fans, including myself, but the execution leaves a lot to be desired. Yes, the gore is done very well; as usual Roth uses great practical effects to create some wince-inducing scenes. The problem is that the first half of the movie feels like a student film. Really bad acting, horrific dialogue, and the documentary style filming doesn't help at all. It's not so much an issue once the characters are captured, but you aren't able to get immersed into the world from the get-go so you're never truly frightened or concerned for them when the bloodshed begins.

    The biggest issue is that The Green Inferno isn't scary in the slightest. Apart from a cheap jump scare near the end, there's little to no suspense or tension in the movie. It's just a linear storyline with characters getting killed off one by one with very little left to the imagination. It also isn't funny. There's maybe two times I chuckled at the tongue-in-cheek jokes. Most of them come across as forced, partly due to the acting and partly due to the jokes not being very funny. Roth tries for a darker, more disturbing atmosphere and he succeeds, but he sacrificed the potential fun to be had with the film. It's not terrible - Eli Roth fans will get exactly what they're expecting - but it also isn't anything new. The Green Inferno is a decent effort but a wholly mediocre movie watching experience.
    6mrhxiii

    Exactly what it wanted to be.

    Gory, torture and alot of screaming. Its an Eli Roth movie, what do you expect.

    Would've rated it higher but the ending in the credits made no sense.

    Blumhouse Horror Films, Ranked by IMDb Rating

    Blumhouse Horror Films, Ranked by IMDb Rating

    Blumhouse Productions has been a major force in the horror genre since 2007's Paranormal Activity became a worldwide sensation. See how IMDb users rank all of Blumhouse's horror movies since 2007.
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    Horror

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      When Eli Roth and his crew approached villagers to be extras in the film, he soon realized that they had never seen a movie and had no concept of what one was. To demonstrate what a movie was, Eli brought a TV and a copy of Cannibal Holocaust (1980) and had a screening for everyone. The villagers loved it and thought it was a comedy. They gladly acted in the film.
    • Goofs
      As Kara is walking away after helping Justine chain herself to a tree, her face mask is on her arm; seconds later it's hanging on her neck and she is proceeding to put it on. All the while Justine is calling her name because her lock isn't working, then Justine appears struggling, then back to Kara getting her cell phone out of her pocket, but the mask seems to have disappeared, then it goes back to Justine, again still struggling with her lock, then back to Kara holding her cell phone up and magically her mask is back on her face. All this in a matter of seconds.
    • Quotes

      [after feeding the natives marijuana]

      Lars: Oh fuck, they got the munchies!

    • Crazy credits
      After the song credits and before the special thanks, there is a "brief history of the Italian cannibal genre and their many names, along with their directors and their many names".
    • Alternate versions
      In Singapore, the film was edited before it could be approved for release with an R21 rating. The distributor was made to remove an instance of strong graphic violence which the board felt was gratuitous; the scene in question occurs as the natives hold a man down and torture him cracking open his skull, removing his tongue and limbs, gouging his eyes out and severing his limbs. Without these cuts the film would have been refused classification.
    • Connections
      Featured in The Tonight Show with Jay Leno: Episode #22.24 (2013)
    • Soundtracks
      Janitors
      Performed by Ariel Levy (as Ariel Levy Dor)

      Written by Ariel Levy (as Ariel Levy Dor)

      Courtesy of Ariel Levy Dor

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    FAQ20

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • September 25, 2015 (United States)
    • Countries of origin
      • Chile
      • United States
    • Official sites
      • Official Facebook
      • Official Twitter
    • Languages
      • Spanish
      • Quechua
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Caníbales
    • Filming locations
      • Tarapoto, Peru
    • Production companies
      • Worldview Entertainment
      • Open Road Films (II)
      • Dragonfly Entertainment
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • $5,000,000 (estimated)
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $7,192,291
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $3,520,626
      • Sep 27, 2015
    • Gross worldwide
      • $12,666,449
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 40m(100 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.39 : 1

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