Snuff film
A snuff film is a video explicitly produced and distributed for entertainment purposes in which participants are murdered on camera. Ed Sanders coined the term in 1971 in his book The Family: The Story of Charles Manson's Dune Buggy Attack Battalion, in which he claimed that the Manson Family had used a stolen NBC-TV camera to record videos of their murders and then buried them in the desert. Their existence is, according to the FBI's definition, an urban legend.[1] Regardless, the press will often use the term 'snuff film' as shorthand for the filming of murder in a wider variety of contexts.[2] They are not to be confused with crush films, which usually involve the killing of small animals and are, sadly, not an urban legend.[3]
{{#choose:1=
![](../I/Lewd_anime.jpeg.webp)
|1=
![](../I/Lewd_anime_meme2.jpg.webp)
|2=
![](../I/Lewd_anime.jpeg.webp)
|2=
![](../I/Lewd_anime_meme2.jpg.webp)
}}
Gather 'round the campfire Folklore |
![]() |
Folklore |
Urban legends |
Superstition |
v - t - e |
Before he became destitute, Al Goldstein, publisher of Screw magazine, had a standing offer of $1 million for anyone who could come up with a commercially sold snuff film. That offer was in place for years, and no one laid claim to it.
Death videos
Although the production of snuff films is illegal and non-existent[1], media containing real deaths aren't illegal in many places[note 1], as evidenced by the ready availability of the Zapruder film
Popular websites of said content include, but are not limited to, Bestgore and Gurochan. A subreddit called /r/PicsOfDeadKids also exists for legal viewing in many countries (albeit quarantined by Reddit). Before the internet, the Faces of Death shockumentary series often compiled many such videos, combined with a heaping helping of fakes.[1][4]
History of assumptions
Before the internet, many exploitation films
There have been many attempts in the past to market films based on those rash assumptions, though. One of the most infamous was the 1976 horror film Snuff[1][7], a reedited version of the 1971 film Slaughter by the husband-and-wife team of grindhouse filmmakers Michael and Roberta Findlay, which was judged to be so bad as to be unreleasable. With a new tagline of "the film that could only be made in South America... where life is CHEAP!" (it was originally filmed in Argentina) and a new ending depicting a pretty young production assistant getting murdered "for real"[8], Snuff got the notoriety that Slaughter never could despite both being terrible films. Gratuitous, excessive, realistic gore has always had a market, and there will always be one until people learn to stop being horrendously sick fucks.
See also
Notes
- The article sourced previously illustrates a UK man arrested for a child murder video due to the UK obscenity laws
File:Wikipedia's W.svg , which includes BDSM, murder, and the word “fuck” in the past.
References
- Snopes: "A Pinch of Snuff"
- Police did NOTHING to track down victim of child porn snuff film
- Nancy, Perry (15 September 2010). "Animal Crush Videos: Senate Committee Testimony".
- Hickey, Brian. "'Cut Back To A Wide Shot. Open The Skull': The Faces Of Death Guy Looks Back." Deadspin, 2 February 2012 (recovered 19 August 2017).
- Rose, Steve. "Cannibal Holocaust: 'Keep filming! Kill more people!'" The Guardian, 15 September 2011 (recovered 21 December 2016).
- Figueroa, Dariel. "About That Time Charlie Sheen Thought He Watched A Snuff Film And Started An FBI Investigation." Uproxx, 15 January 2015 (recovered 21 December 2016).
- Wax, Alyse. "Homicide or Hoax? A Brief History of 1976's SNUFF." ComingSoon.net, 11 March 2016 (recovered 19 August 2017).
- The "real" murder starts about three minutes in, and looks about as convincing as the "fake" murders that the clip opens with.