The Green Inferno Review (2024)
On paper, this is a deliciously dark satire of "slacktivism" and white savior complexes. In practice, The Green Inferno is too busy slinging entrails to make a coherent point. To Roth’s credit, the practical effects are outstanding. The gore is visceral, sticky, and brilliantly executed. One early scene involving a quadriplegic character and a colony of ravenous ants is genuinely hard to watch. Another sequence—a full-body dismemberment accompanied by tribal chanting—has the queasy, hypnotic rhythm of a nightmare. For horror fans who value prosthetic artistry, there are moments of grotesque beauty here.
The plot follows a naive group of New York college activists led by the idealistic Justine (Lorenza Izzo). After witnessing the eviction of an indigenous village for a logging conglomerate, they hijack a plane to the Peruvian Amazon to chain themselves to bulldozers and stage a "non-violent protest." Their mission succeeds, briefly, until their return flight crashes deep in the jungle. They are captured by the very tribe they were trying to save—a tribe that, it turns out, practices ritualistic dismemberment and cannibalism. the green inferno review
Director: Eli Roth Starring: Lorenza Izzo, Ariel Levy, Daryl Sabara, Kirby Bliss Blanton Genre: Horror / Exploitation Runtime: 100 minutes On paper, this is a deliciously dark satire