Umberto Lenzi’s 1981 film Cannibal Ferox (released in the US as Make Them Die Slowly ) stands as a notorious pillar of the Italian cannibal subgenre. While often critically dismissed for its graphic animal violence and misogyny, the film’s journey to Blu-ray represents a critical case study in the preservation, censorship, and commercial viability of extreme cult cinema in the 21st century.
Released at the tail end of the cannibal boom (following Cannibal Holocaust , 1980), Cannibal Ferox follows three New Yorkers in the Colombian Amazon who encounter a prostitute fleeing a corrupt emerald dealer. The film’s primary notoriety stems from authentic animal killings (a turtle, a snake, a pig, and a spider) and its status as a “Video Nasty” in the UK during the 1980s. This legal persecution inadvertently elevated the film from low-budget schlock to a coveted artifact of transgressive cinema. cannibal ferox blu ray
Cannibal Ferox on Blu-ray: The Cannibal Boom, Video Nasty Preservation, and the Limits of Exploitation Restoration Umberto Lenzi’s 1981 film Cannibal Ferox (released in