saynomore Wrote:Okay now, I'm a gore geek, I admit it, so I expect more from my "mocha" (pronounced MOH-Cha--as in cha-cha-cha--not mocha like the coffee), which is Spanglish for gore movie/book/documentary/etc. I read Fangoria to keep up with the latest mocha in film and read the Hollywood zines to keep up with the latest mocha in print (cyberpunk horror is currently dying out and being replaced by "ghost gore" (see: Pulse).
If you want the most from your mocha, seek out "Aftermath" by Nacho Cerda. I haven't seen it, but I've heard enough about it to decide I never want to.
I enjoy gore flicks, but not when they venture into "snuff" territory. "Dead Alive" for me is the ultimate gore flick. Don't get me wrong, I've seen tons of others, but this has always been the high-point for me.
You mentioned in the other post on this subject that "Texas Chainsaw Massacre" set a new bar for gore when it was released. You do realize there was virtually no gore in that film, right? It was all mostly suggestion, nobody was "chainsawed". It sounds like "Hostel" is looking back to these roots where suggestion does WAY more to you than actually showing whats going on. But, I haven't seen "Hostel", so I can't say for sure.