Mondo movies


Mondo movies, also called mondo movies, also known as death movies - both short and feature-length documentaries, are a compilation of scenes showing real death. The mondo movies are mostly from police archives (crime scenes, autopsies), accidental recordings (public suicide, accidents, riots), snuff movies (infamous "movies of the last breath") and chronicles of war (genocide, fighting victims). The quality of the fragments used may vary from amateur recordings, such as black and white and no voice, to colorfully professionally recorded productions.

The authenticity of all materials can not be fully confirmed. Producers of this type of film have repeatedly added staged sequences to reinforce the end result of their production and generate a strong shock at the recipient. Pond movies are often identified with snuff movies. This is a mistake because there is a fundamental difference between these species. Snuff movies are productions based primarily on the scenes of torture and killing specifically for this abducted victim, while the mondo movies are based mainly on legal material.

Opponents of this type of film regard their viewers and creators as deviant and perverted, also accusing them of lack of respect for human suffering and death. But the devotees defend themselves by saying that they are guided by the pure curiosity of seeing the other dark side of the world around us. Movies of this type are not widely accepted, and in many countries in the world, many of the titles of this genre are often banned.

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