Meat
Meat
R | 08 October 2010 (USA)
Meat Trailers

A young woman is awakened to a world of cruelty, shadowy passions and sensuality.

Reviews
YouHeart I gave it a 7.5 out of 10
SeeQuant Blending excellent reporting and strong storytelling, this is a disturbing film truly stranger than fiction
Aubrey Hackett While it is a pity that the story wasn't told with more visual finesse, this is trivial compared to our real-world problems. It takes a good movie to put that into perspective.
Tobias Burrows It's easily one of the freshest, sharpest and most enjoyable films of this year.
TdSmth5 An overweight and ugly butcher is sexually involved with his boss and his younger and attractive co-worker, who also likes to film stuff in green nightvision for some reason.Some loser is out there doing who knows what in an office. His mom doesn't think much of him and he's not interested in his girlfriend/wife at all.The attractive butcher girl is somewhat slutty, lets others take advantage of her, and gets herself involved with some animal activist guy. There's a murder I guess, and it turns out the loser is a cop tasked with the investigation. In the end there's something of a twist.Meat features very little dialogue but lots of animal meat/gore which is a bit more perverse and sick than it needs to be. The butcher doesn't do butcher work if you will, instead he cuts up animal carcasses and organs in some gore-porn fashion for the sickos behind the camera. There's some ugly sex among ugly people and mostly unattractive nude bodies. The story seems to be OK...for a short, which this movie sort of is but they just added a bunch of gratuitous animal meat footage as filler and to make up for the absence of dialogue.The ending is puzzling and I'm not sure if it's possible to make sense of the movie after all.
kosmasp A very strange movie that shows a lot of "flesh". Both from animals (raw meat) and human (naked). But to reduce it to those things would be simple minded and not fair to the movie. It tries to create a vibe, an otherworldly feeling to it. Apart from the usual numbness that might succumb anyone in our society today that is.There is not only one mystery, but quite a few, especially concerning the ending that seems to be quite a maze. Even an extended scene on the DVD didn't really answer any question, which you might find good or bad, depending on how you like your movies. The acting is solid (underplayed as the whole movie of course) and the rare dialog is decent enough too.
mario_c MEAT is a dark surreal thriller with a complex plot and weird characters. It's all very strange from the beginning, because all the characters have unusual behavior and everything is very disconnected and unclear. We don't know who is who and why they're taking those actions. The main plot's topic is a murder that occurs inside a butcher shop but the oddness begins when we notice that the detective and the victim are so identical that they seem to be the same man (it's the same actor that plays both roles)! Then it enters in a quite surreal and bizarre development that not even the end turns it clear and solved… yes, it begins strange and ends even stranger… I liked this mood of mystery and oddness and also some bizarre scenes that occur unexpectedly (like that one when the detective's girlfriend (?) commits suicide, or the urine scene), but the pace is a bit too slow and there're some details that should have been better explained… As other users said it's not a movie for everyone and not be distributed in a commercial circuit because it clearly has an experimental and surreal basis that is materialized in an artsy cinematography and unusual plot. It's the kind of movies you can't figure it all out just seeing it for the first time
wvisser-leusden 'Vlees'(= Dutch for 'meat') is difficult to compare with any film-trend from past or present.Anyway, set in places like a butcher shop and a slaughter-house, its title flawlessly adapts to its contents. This is extended to a considerable amount of human flesh, both male and female. Shown in a not too sophisticated way, one cannot fail to notice that the naked humans from 'Vlees' are clearly not selected for their above-average physical beauty.We continue with this film's plot, if there is any. It looks more like a random collection of facts & happenings, increasingly losing coherence. All set in a slightly dark mood.However, 'Vlees' picturing makes the icing on the cake. We see some surprising scenes that'll stick to your mind. For instance a sex-scene in a shower, filmed from above. Or a psychedelic effect reminding us of the late 19-Sixties, representing the tension proceeding a rape.If there is any categorization possible, I should call 'Vlees' a very Dutch film. With a characteristic direct approach throughout, not too sophisticated and a little crude. Carrying a considerable amount of nudity, and shot without brilliance but with competent craftsmanship.