
Arrow Video
A visionary and bizarre slice of Mexican arthouse cinema, We Are The Flesh is an extraordinary and unsettling film experience, a sexually charged and nightmarish journey into an otherworldly dimension of carnal desire and excess, as well as a powerful allegory on the corrupting power of human desire. A young brother and sister, roaming an apocalyptic city, take refuge in the dilapidated lair of a strange hermit. He puts them to work building a bizarre cavernous structure, where he acts out his insane and depraved fantasies. Trapped in this maddening womb-like world under his malign influence, they find themselves sinking into the realms of dark and forbidden behaviour. Mixing the graphic, powerful imagery of Gaspar Noe's Love and Enter The Void with the surreal, hallucinatory impact of Alejandro Jodorowsky, We Are The Flesh is a bizarre, psychedelic head trip, mixing intense, outrageously explicit imagery with a profound allegory on the nature of existence, to make this an unforgettable, boundary-pushing experience unlike anything you've ever seen.
Special Features
- New interviews with director Emiliano Rocha Minter and cast members Noé Hernández, María Evoli and Diego Gamaliel
- A new video essay by critic Virginie Sélavy
- Original theatrical trailer
- Two short films by Emiliano Rocha Minter; Dentro and Videohome
- Stills gallery
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Customer Reviews
Top Customer Reviews
Where reviews refer to foods or cosmetic products, results may vary from person to person. Customer reviews are and do not represent the views of The Hut Group.
This is a hallucinatory slice of Mexican Surrealism. It’s both memory evoking of other transgressive cinema & within itself. The finale is amazing & reminded me of how easy TAZ’s are to create ..& necessary for glimpses Within + Beyond. Must See!!
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Arrow does such a fantastic job with anything they publish. Stunning art house work, this film included. I bought it on sale, with the description alone ("surreal" Mexican film --- oh, Jodorowsky is genius!--yes please. I couldn't make it past the middle. Incest the the primary plot twist, and so . . . it was too repulsive to keep watching. Not for me, but also, I cannot watch /Cannibal Holocaust/ for the animal cruelty (of which the filmmaker was convicted) . . . so I'm sensitive. I am a life-long subscriber to /Fangoria/, I have little problem with gore. Apparently I have a problem with a bad guy forcing a brother and sister have sex while he watches and masturbates. No thanks.
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