The ghosts, nightmares and creepy noises (horror elements) are not as disturbing as the two
extremely violent scenes in the film, one at the beginning, one at the end.
Not exact matches
The story missions, centring around Seed and his siblings, are disquieting and
extremely violent, with pretty graphic
scenes of torture, indoctrination and religious frenzy; after a while, it gets wearing.
For instance, the boxing
scenes are
extremely violent and bloody but are also a virtuoso example of editing (by Thelma Schoonmaker) and cinematography (again by Michael Chapman).
The
violent scenes are short but
extremely bloody.
Amid all this appalling cliche, Knowing summons its entire reserve of filmmaking energy for gleeful
scenes of mass death: an
extremely violent plane crash that sends passengers fleeing the wreckage covered in flames; an outlandish subway accident that wipes out several platforms of commuters with a CGI splat.
The story missions, centring around Seed and his siblings, are disquieting and
extremely violent, with pretty graphic
scenes of torture, indoctrination and religious frenzy; after a while, it gets wearing.