You're Wrong About - Snuff Films
Episode Date: June 25, 2018Sarah tells Mike about how snuff films don't exist but lots of near-snuff films do. Digressions include "Basic Instinct," gymnastics and YouTube’s righthand bar. Mike is palpably gros...sed out for at least two-thirds of the episode.Continue reading →Support us:Subscribe on PatreonDonate on PaypalBuy cute merchWhere to find us: Sarah's other show, Why Are Dads Mike's other show, Maintenance PhaseSupport the show
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And also, like, I finished watching Faces of Death this morning and I couldn't eat while
I was watching it, so I'm hungry now.
Welcome to You're Wrong About, the podcast where we circle back to things we've forgotten
and re-forget them.
It's so bad.
I can't say it so haltingly.
You sound like you're a lawyer presenting evidence that you don't fully understand.
You're like, the cell phone tower.
I don't know.
We need a better tagline.
But anyway, welcome to the show.
I am Michael Hopp.
I'm a reporter for The Huffington Post.
I'm Sarah Marshall.
I'm a writer for a bunch of different places.
And, Michael and I, we're just talking about my book that I'm allegedly writing, but really,
I'm just taking long walks and thinking about.
So I'm also a professional walker thinker right now.
And today we're talking about snuff films.
Yes.
Oh, God.
This is just something I've been curious about for a long time and I feel as if I didn't
really learn any new information about all of this, but I just sort of sat with this
material for the first time since I was like a young teenager because I was a big horror
movie person when I was a teen.
But I never saw Faces of Death, which is one of the texts we're going to talk about.
Yes.
But we should probably say what snuff films are because I feel like many people, especially
people younger than us who are out around for the panic about snuff films, don't actually
know what we mean.
So snuff films, or at least my understanding of them, is that they're raw footage of people
being killed.
There was this panic in, I suppose, the 80s until the 90s once VHS tapes became a thing,
but there were these tapes that circulated that were actual footage of actual people
dying.
And they were these rare and weird things that you would kind of hear through whispers,
that there were these networks of people through which you would get snuff films, and they
were videos of bestiality and murder and horrible accidents and people hurting themselves.
And there are a lot of conflicting definitions because we are talking about something which,
based on the core definition, a bona fide example has never yet appeared.
Oh.
The classic definition of the snuff film is of something that doesn't exist, and the
bare bones of that are that it is something created for commercial distribution.
So it's not a video that a murderer takes of their victim because it's part of the way
they like to do their crime, or it's not a video that inadvertently captures footage
of someone dying like a news broadcast, which there are a lot of examples of and which we're
going to talk about.
The idea of a snuff film that first emerged in the 1970s is that it's something specifically
made for commercial distribution and that people are killed in service of a commercial
product.
Oh, so you're killing people for the footage?
Yes.
It's not that you kill people and it happens to be filmed.
You're doing this so that you can film it.
Yeah, so that's the core definition of snuff.
It's essentially people being murdered for the creation of film.
The same way that porn is about people having sex for a film.
It's not like you're taking video and people happen to start having sex.
And when you think about it, it does make sense because Deep Throat in 1972, which is
the first year that rumors of snuff, as we now know, the legend, really emerge.
In 1972, Deep Throat becomes this huge blockbuster success and a lot of its profits go to the
mob.
And there's this idea that snuff is something that is propagated by these vast networks
of organized crime and sex trafficking rings and you're like, you know, sure.
I'm seeing echoes of the Satanic Panic here where you think that there's this whole network
of extreme human behavior.
When you think about it, killing someone is extreme human behavior.
And then killing someone just so you can film it is like even extremer human behavior.
And so it makes sense that there wouldn't be all that many people who are doing that.
Let's then go to the start of the snuff film rumors.
And these come out in 1972 and these are post a decade of footage of the Vietnam War.
I think we do have a sense as a country that American media has become kind of a snuff industry
because we are sharing all these images of violence and death and torture.
And hardcore porn exists as a viable market in a way that it hasn't before.
I mean, the first hardcore pornographic movie to legally be distributed was in 1967.
It was, I think, called Swedish Wedding Manual.
It's the sweets.
Something of a Swedish, man.
If you put Swedish in the title, it's gotta be porn.
Yeah, and so it's in the same way that Altamont, which happened in 1969, took place at a time
when rock concerts of that, you know, kind of large scale festival nature had only existed
for like four years.
I guess porn had only existed for a few years at the time that rumors of snuff started appearing.
I guess porn is we know it, right?
Like porn in theaters, porn distributed.
This is pre-home video.
Right.
But like hardcore porn, you're seeing people actually having sex with each other for the
purpose of the film to be paid in an industry the same way we start imagining snuff later.
I mean, I've never watched pornography, so I'll trust you.
You're clearly a pervert for having seen pornography.
But anyway, yes, it sounds, it sounds terrible.
It's an interesting discipline and we're still getting used to it.
And Deep Throat is also a porno that has reached middle America in 1972 in a way that
porn hadn't really before.
So the walls are starting to disintegrate.
We're having an inception kind of a time with the exploitation, maybe, I guess,
Avalanche, Edith Piaf.
And in 1971, a book about the Manson family is published where the author talks about rumors.
And this is something that Rachel Monroe, our guest last episode, tipped me off to.
And she was like, maybe this is how the snuff rumors started.
This turned out as far as I can tell to be true.
This author talks in his book about rumors that the Manson family had taken videos of
the murders that they had committed, including the murder of Sharon Tate, and that there were
these film canisters buried somewhere on Spawn Ranch depicting the murders, which I find to be
doubtful because my first thought about that is those people could not have gotten it together
to put together the kind of equipment they would need to film a murder in 1969.
Like the lighting alone would have been so far beyond them.
They were just out of their minds on speed and LSD pretty much consistently.
Like they were not learning how to use AV equipment at that time in their lives.
That to me is where it falls apart.
And people have searched the grounds of Spawn Ranch looking for these fabled canisters,
but they've never found anything.
There are a lot of rumors of things in the 70s that never existed,
but they just seem like the kind of thing that the Manson family would do.
I feel like we forget sometimes that this is the era before VHS, right?
00:07:08,240 --> 00:07:10,640
So to film something, you did that literally.
You filmed it on film, and film was hella unwieldy.
I mean, wasn't it like you could only actually film things for eight minutes at a time before
you needed a new canister?
Like it was extremely expensive and extremely inconvenient to film stuff.
And you had to record your audio separately with a whole different system and apparatus.
You didn't have a camera that could record sound simultaneously.
So you would have needed like Tex Watson on camera, Susan Atkins with the boom mic.
And then the editing, I literally don't know how they edited back then.
Like I don't know how you edited before computers.
It seems wild to me that movies were ever made basically before there was Final Cut Pro.
And then back at the ranch, Linda Kasabian is busy in her editing suite.
Yeah.
Right, but this is the rumor.
This is what people believed, you know?
It's one of those things where the details don't make sense at all,
but it's the kind of thing that just is so scary that it just goes along,
I think, with the general sense of fear.
And then in 1976, Alan Shackleton, who's an exploitation film producer, finds this movie
originally titled Slaughter that Tom and Roberta Finlay, who were husband-wife
exploitation filmmaker duo in the 70s, who made a bunch of intense exploitation movies
that combined graphic sex and violence in a way that was apparently unprecedented.
Awesome.
And in the 60s, they did a movie in 1967 called The Touch of Her Flesh.
That was apparently groundbreaking and having sex and violence in extreme and equal measure.
Nice.
And then Tom Finlay was later killed in an accident with a helicopter propeller.
Oh my god.
Like the way that people get killed in the Omen movies.
Anyway, they had made this movie titled Slaughter that was just terrible,
and it had basically no story and was sort of from the boom in the early 70s of
Manson Family exploitation films.
Because much as there were exploitation films inspired by Patty Hearst's kidnapping,
as we discussed in a previous episode, there were a whole bunch of exploitation movies
that used the Manson Family as an excuse to have just sort of
soft core, violent, story-less scenarios for 80 minutes with a bunch of somewhat naked
chicks and a guru kind of a guy.
Like this was a viable subgenre for a few years.
God, the 70s were like so much more hardcore than we remember them.
Like we have this rosy vision of like mom and dad and Sally and John living in the suburbs,
but like Charlie Manson exploitation movies.
I didn't even know this was a thing.
Apparently there were exploitation movies of everything that one could think of.
So with Slaughter, were they using real violence in that movie and real sex?
No, it was like a completely forgettable movie that the Finlays made like 50 or 60 movies.
I think they were just like crank it out, be done, move on to the next thing.
They were working in South America because it was literally just cheaper to make movies there.
And so a lot of their cast members did not speak English.
And so the movie kind of looks like Man O's The Hands of Fate,
you know, which is similar to the problem that the Manson Family would have come to
if they'd attempted to film their murders is that they would have been so inept that everyone's
dialogue wouldn't have been synced up correctly.
So they made this basically unwatchable movie, but the producer Alan Shackleton was like,
I shall not waste a perfectly existing movie.
I'm going to repackage it in some way.
And he realized that he could capitalize on rumors of snuff.
And so he commissioned and had added in a closing sequence where we like cut away from
the movie proper and then show this actress pretending to just be like a regular actress.
Oh, I just shot a scene.
And then she actually gets murdered and disemboweled and cut apart by the camera crew.
And it's all real.
And they retitle that snuff and the tagline was made in South America where life is cheap.
Oh my God, really?
And then one of the rumors is that Shackleton, the producer,
hired fake feminists to pick at the movie.
Because in 1976, if you wanted your movie to do good business,
you had feminist protested.
People would see it.
It's like the movie that feminists don't want you to see.
That totally works now, too.
That works for basic instinct.
The feminists and the gays pick at it basic instinct.
It was just like bound to be a smash.
And so snuff, when it opens in New York attracts, this is 1976, it attracts significant attention.
And the hired feminists, maybe they're hired.
There were a lot of genuine feminists who joined the picket line.
Everyone refused to actually see it because they didn't want to give their $4 to someone
who was profiting off of women's pain.
And you look at the kind of porn that exists and has always existed.
And if you're living in a misogynist culture where sex is linked with violence,
then hardcore sex movies are going to involve a lot of violence against women.
And that's what porn depicted in the 70s.
And one of the key arguments of anti-pornography feminism was that
porn didn't serve as a reverberation chamber or a reflection of misogynist impulses,
but was creating them to a significant degree.
And that porn was the cause of men behaving violently against women,
which was never conclusively, as far as I know, proven by any definitive study,
the Mies Commission, which Andrea Dworkin testified before, as well as Linda Lovelace in 1986.
Andrea Dworkin consistently made claims that snuff movies exist as she had talked to women
who had seen them. She believed these women.
And it's a lot of argument, but it's just that nothing has ever appeared.
And partly, I think it's that we have this very specific idea of what snuff needs to be
to qualify as snuff. It's something that is made in the porn model where you get mobster backers.
And then you hire people to be killed, not knowing that that's the job,
and then kill them in order to make a film, as opposed to you capture a death on film,
and then you put it on the news and you make advertising money off of that.
So it's just the need to believe in some kind of overriding top-down structure for something
to be snuffed as opposed to depictions of human pain and suffering and violence being inflicted
on people do make a lot of money, even if no one necessarily planned it that way or developed a
whole industry around it. So how does Faces of Death fit into this?
Did you watch Faces of Death as a team?
My relationship with snuff films is I was 14 years old. I had been out probably at Denny's
because that's where I spent my entire teenage years. I came home and I could see
light coming from the downstairs, so I knew my brother was watching TV.
Oh no.
I went downstairs and my brother was watching Faces of Death.
I can't even watch like Quentin Tarantino movies. I have to watch them through my fingers
because I cannot handle movie violence, especially like anything involving cutting,
anything surgery scenes, like fucking nip tuck, anything fleshy or like red or moist.
Can you watch Alien?
I watched Alien with my hand on the fast forward button, and I first
talked my fast forward to see the entire dinner scene because I knew it was about to happen.
It's bad, man, yeah.
So I walked into the basement and my brother was watching a scene from Faces of Death
that was in my like horrified, still traumatized to this day memory,
was a man cutting his own face with a razor blade.
And I lost my shit and my brother was like, oh, don't worry, it gets better. It's not that bad.
I think I sat there with my hands over my eyes for about 10 minutes until that little montage was
over. And then there were these scenes of, I remember it was a protester in like Argentina
who got shot by the cops. It was like helicopter footage. I still have the images of this in my
head and I still shudder when I think about them.
And is that something that you wish you hadn't seen?
Oh, yeah. There was an argument that we should all see the footage of people being tortured at
grave or we should all look at the photos of Matthew Shepard after he was murdered.
I get where those arguments are coming from, but I have literal nightmares when I see violent imagery.
Yeah.
So I wish that I had never seen these. I wish that I did not know that they existed.
Yeah, I will respond to that with an anecdote about me when I was a younger child. But when I was,
I think, six, I saw the scene in Batman Returns where Michelle Pfeiffer becomes Catwoman
and she comes home and she goes nuts on her apartment and she puts all of her stuffed animals
down her garbage disposal. And I, as a young child, found that unbelievably disturbing,
like that bothered me for years.
That was your faces of death?
That was my faces of death as like a first grader because as a kid you imbue your stuffed animals
with, you know, life force. And so to me, she had just offed a whole family.
Did you ever see some films back at the time?
No. Interestingly, the way that I doubled back was that as a teenager,
I exposed myself to this course of horror movies. I had approached the idea for a long time of
there are things that you can see that can just destroy you, that can be psychically too much
for you.
Yes.
And I really found it liberating to be like, I can just safely traumatize myself in my own home
with my tapes and prepare myself for the worst that life has to offer me by watching a bunch of
weird beheadings.
So you actually watched Faces of Death?
I watched it this week. It's a whole series. There's six of them. And you saw one that I
didn't see. I only saw the first one.
Okay.
And the first one, it might contain no instances of actual unreinacted death caught on camera.
It has the aftermath of death. And it has, for example, a bicyclist who was run over by a semi
and they show real footage of the remains of that person.
And that's real. It's from news footage. And it sucks.
Yeah. Was it commercially released? Like, did it show in theaters and stuff?
The director of Faces of Death is a guy named John Allen Schwartz.
And one of the things that he said about the movie to connect to your experiences,
one thing that made this notorious was that once a kid saw it, a bit of innocence was taken away.
Yeah.
When young, you're immortal. That's easily forgotten.
Fuck you, John Allen Schwartz.
So he knows that he's made this kind of ring film where it circulates and does this to the kids.
And so the story behind that is that he was working a day job in the industry
on Leonard Nimoy's show in the 70s and was trying to crack into filmmaking.
And he got this idea to do an exploration of death hosted by this doctor character,
the first Faces of Death movie. And I think the first three are hosted by a coroner named Dr.
Francis Gross with an umlat on the O that no one pronounces. And the doctor character narrates
everything and he has this rod-serling kind of a presence. What is the Twilight Zone narration?
Your imagination is the key to unlock this door.
Is it him narrating over footage of people dying?
It's not just that, but it is also that. And so he made the movie for a Japanese production
company. The budget was $450,000, most of which they spent on the faked docus footage.
Faked docus footage.
Yeah, which is about half of the movie, maybe more than half.
And he was like, you know, we made it and we didn't really know if we'd ever see it again.
We thought we'd just go to the Japanese video market and ended up making $40 million dollars.
No way.
And these things are hard to tabulate for Grindhouse movies,
but it's, you know, somewhere in that neighborhood is where the estimate is.
I think it made $20 million in Japan.
Whoa.
Yeah.
What is the faked docus footage? So the actual movie itself is a mixture of found footage and
this like reenactments of faked deaths. How do they do that?
When I was watching it, I at first was priding myself and being like, oh, I think that part's faked.
You know, I'm a 30 year old woman and I'm proud of my ability to tell when something looks not real.
And what I realized is that all of the actual depictions of people dying in faces of death
are fake reenactment footage.
The opening is footage of an open heart surgery and images of very old, very dead people
in a coroner's office. And it does that over-determined cable news thing where it shows you like,
here's a super dead person and then it plays like a discordant chord, you know, where it's like,
and it's like, yes, we know that it's unsettling to see a dead person.
You could play like minimalist music or something.
Like you don't really have to be.
You don't have to punctuate everything by like telling me how I'm supposed to feel.
So it starts with that. And then Dr. Francis Grose tells us about the journey he's going to
take us on. And then we do animal death for a while. We're shown footage of animals in slaughterhouses
and of a chicken having its head cut off for the first several minutes.
And at the end of that, the narrator is like, I'm not so sure about eating meat.
And then it progresses. And he's like, I'm not so sure about execution.
Oh, so it like gets more extreme as it goes along.
It does. But it also has these moments where, you know, because it has such a professed goal
of like faces of death, we are going to look on death. And Dr. Francis Grose actually.
So at one point, he refers to the country of Africa.
Nice.
Oh, and so then another Francis Grose line from the opening of the film that I really liked
in the way of, you know, of great Twilight Zone narration is,
we have developed a world that refuses to recognize our own destiny.
I mean, sure. I was thinking, like, as you're describing this,
you can just tell that he's going to use some high minded excuse
to show a bunch of footage, right? Like, you know,
the whole point of the whole thing is exploitation and shock value.
But you just know he's going to pretend that it's some like interesting academic exploration
and some like, woke enlightenment, like, we must look upon death to truly understand it.
And then it's like, here's a footage of some car accident.
It's like Fox News, America's Worst Drivers type footage.
And like with this pretentiousness over top of it.
Yeah, it absolutely does that. And there's one part that I loved that's just like Ed Wood like,
where they show footage of the aftermath of a plane accident, but they don't have footage
of the actual accident. And so they have like a still image of a plane.
And then they cut to footage of an explosion.
Nice.
And they're like, no one will notice. We just don't have the money for anything else.
And it's fine. And it's just so beautifully amateurish and stupid.
And then they had, you know, footage of this tourist, you know,
trying to lure a bear by feeding it bread. And like these things that were caught by a
single camera, but filmed by multiple angles, obviously, somehow.
Oh, so that's how you can tell that it's faked is that like,
the camera placement and the sound are like a little too perfect.
Oh, yeah. And what happens is that they're like, no, don't. And then the camera jogs away.
And then it comes and then you see like a bear eating a big like piece of beef.
And they're like, oh my God. Oh no, Jeff.
Yeah, exactly. And you're like, wow, I really feel that I've looked on death and confronted
destiny. And I feel like that's what makes it a true American classic though,
because this is like this adolescent rite of passage that I always heard about,
you know, boys being exposed to like the film that they show you about your changing bodies.
I mean, I remember people talking about it in middle school and high school.
It was like this thing in whispers, the same way that in the pre Internet era,
the way that porn got shared around that there was in my middle school of 1200 people, there was
a porn video that like, oh, Steve has it this week. See if you can get it next week. And then
like, oh no, it's with Tom and like, no, no, Matt has it. And it was like this thing that you had
to like ask around to get and then each person would have it for like a couple of days, like the
Stanley Cup or something. That's like, no, it's like life in Soviet Russia. And I remember faces
of death being like that too, that it was this thing that you would hear rumors about that somebody
had it. And oh, we're all going to get together and watch it at this person's house. And it was
like this weird cult object that people fetishize and kind of everybody wanted to get their hands on
for reasons that even at 14, I was completely baffled by like, I understand why people want
to watch porn. I don't understand why people want to watch the aftermath of a plane crash.
I think there's something about faces of death that fulfills that adolescent wish fulfillment
where there are parts of it that are really grim and they do show footage of like mangled corpses
or they go into a morgue. Did that seem real, the mangled corpses? Well, some of them I knew
were real, but there's this also interesting thing that happens when you're kind of questioning
everything the whole time. Everything could be real or it could be fake. And it's just both at
once in a way. It's like Schrodinger's mangled corpse. And there was the sequence that apparently
everyone always talks about when they meet the director, they ask about the sequence where a
group of diners in an unnamed Oriental land in that sort of Edward Said Orientalism sort of way
are all brought a live monkey whose head is then screwed into an apparatus on their table
and they bash its head with mallets and eat its brains. And it's like, see,
this is what life is like in the Eastern lands. And that's a scene that people remember really
vividly. And I was watching it and I was like, is this real? Like, it could be. And I was like,
did I just watch a monkey get its head beaten in? Or did I not? And I think there's a superstition
that we also were maybe more prone to have about filmed media when our abilities to encounter it
hanged on being able to get our hands on these objects where they had more totemic power,
I think, because they were limited to these sacred little objects imbued with vitality.
You couldn't just Google Snuff and then download this exploitation movie from the 70s and immediately
watch it and be like, oh, that's fake. Faces of death is on YouTube. Isn't that so weird to
think about when you think about the struggles of all the teens through all the generations of
teens that have had to get their friend or their friend's brother to rent it for them?
And I just go on YouTube and search Faces of Death and it is one of the least scary things on
YouTube. That's interesting. I mean, I guess it's like once something becomes easier to get
the quality becomes less important to you. Like there's all these studies of
if you think that a wine cost $40, you're more likely to report that it's tastes good. Whereas
if you think it cost $2, you're more likely to think that it tasted bad. Wine is such a shell game.
I think it's all made up. It's all constructed in your mind of how much something is worth. And I
think the fact that you had to hunt around for Faces of Death as if it was the hope diamond
probably made you think like, wow, this must be so amazing or this must be insightful. This
must be worth seeing because it's so hard to get. Yeah, it has more meaning because it took more
effort. How did you feel watching it? I mean, I felt kind of prurient and weird at times. And
just also still, I really returned to the feeling that I hadn't really thought about since I was
very much since I was a teenager of like, is watching this going to scar me? Yeah. What's
interesting about Faces of Death, so Faces of Death came out in 1978 and it has this weird
quality that reminds me of I Spit on Your Grave, which also came out in 1978 and is one of those
movies that feel so real that I think at a time when you couldn't just go look up like, is this
real or not, had this kind of documentary quality that also made it feel real. And I think both of
those movies were made with weirdly sincere motivations behind them. To draw the connection
between Faces of Death and I Spit on Your Grave, I Spit on Your Grave was made by the director
Mayor Zarki after he was in the park with his friend in 70s New York and this naked,
battered woman ran up to him and she had been a victim of a rape and an assault in the park. Oh
my god. And he took her to the police station and was really horrified at how the police treated
her. Wow. And how they were just sort of barking questions at her and not comforting her and
and he felt not taking her seriously. And so from this experience, he made this exploitation film
based on this idea that the system didn't care about women, which it didn't in the 70s. You
know, I think rape was barely a crime in terms of something that actually was investigated and
prosecuted. Have you seen, this is a pointless question. I know what the answer is, but have
you seen I Spit on Your Grave? Yeah. I saw the title of that movie and like ran in the opposite
direction. The premise of I Spit on Your Grave is that this woman who's a writer from the city
goes to the country to quote, spend some time by herself. So she goes to the country and it's
this classic 70s horror film narrative, the same kind of thing we see in the Texas Chainsaw
Massacre of urban versus rural. Also the same thing we see in Deliverance where she comes and all
these local guys show up and are like, hey, a rich city woman who's sluttin' around in her city
clothes and what the movie presents is sort of an inevitable course of events. They show up at her
house and gang rape her and then leave her for dead and then she slowly recovers and then lures
them all to her and murders them spectacularly. Oh my god. Including emasculating the lead rapist
in a bathtub. There's so many reasons I'm never gonna see this fucking movie. Yeah, it's one of
those things where if America were a kindergartner and this were the drawing it was making, you would
be like, what is happening at home? And there was also still animal death in movies in the 70s.
Oh, like they killed actual animals? Yes. I mean, not frequently, but it happened and it wasn't
like now where like if you kill a fish on screen in a movie, you would never hear the end of it
and your career would probably be fucked, right? If you did it in the 70s, it was like,
you're pretty much, yeah, you're Francis Ford Coppola, what are we gonna do? So there's an animal
death in Apocalypse Now, but it's considered like quick and painless. And Heaven's Gate led to the
crackdown that we now have on animal activities and movies because the director killed, I think,
multiple horses in a fairly painful and protracted way. It was this interestingly violent time,
I think maybe in a way that we don't recognize. And there is one movie that I've seen that I wish
I hadn't seen. There's one movie in the whole history of movies. Was it Mamma Mia?
Sorry. I haven't seen Mamma Mia. I really like Abba though. No, it's Cannibal Holocaust. Have
you heard of that movie? Oh, for fuck's sake, how are those two words in the same, like in that order?
Quite inevitably, if you look at the kind of titles that, you know, Italian horror movies,
late 70s and early 80s, I know. Yes, so imagine young Sarah, young 18-year-old Sarah saying,
I'm going to get Cannibal Holocaust. My God. And it's going to be a good time.
Cannibal Holocaust is interesting because it came out in 1980. It was made in response partly to the
kind of rumors about snuff that people have been talking about throughout the 70s in the vein of
I spent on your grave and of faces of death of like, is this real? Is this fake? I don't know.
Could be. It's very similar to the Blair Witch Project in some ways. And it's fascinating that
it was this found footage horror movie that was marketed as, you know, maybe it's real,
like the stars of it were barred from making public appearances or being in other films for a year
so that the public could wonder if they were dead, which actually ended up working too well,
because the director, Ruggiero Deodato, was threatened with an indictment for murder.
Oh, wow. Also, it can't be great for their careers either to be like,
am I alive or dead? Like, it's kind of hard to book work after that.
Well, they were also being paid on set in Colombian pesos, so you really feel like they
weren't benefiting from any of this at all. But anyway, the premise of the film is that
Robert Kerman plays a distinguished anthropology professor in New York City, and he is sent to
the jungles of South America to try and recover the footage of this film crew that went down to
make a documentary about local tribes and watch it to determine how they died and decide whether
the New York TV stations should show it on television. Within this movie is this idea about
what are we showing to people, what kind of an appetite for violence have we created,
because professor watches the footage and determines that the documentary filmmakers
went down and intentionally drove the tribe's people into a burning hut to try and get
staked footage of a massacre and did all these horrible violent things, which are going to become
fodder for a horror movie. So it's kind of like the drug report article about the Killed Newsweek
article about Monica Lewinsky, where you want to show people inflicting horrible crimes on each
other, and you're like, we're going to make a movie about how it's terrible that people want to see
that. And in the process, we're going to do it, and we're going to not pay anyone enough.
And so the documentary footage reveals that they did all these horrible things to the natives,
and then the natives retaliated by murdering them, and that footage is captured on the found footage,
which is then showed to the TV people who are like, my God, we shouldn't show this ever. It's too
much for the people, and our terrible pornographic approach to pain and violence has finally reached
its natural end. We've learned something. So again, it's weirdly optimistic, like so many
seemingly bleak texts. But the thing that really got me about Cannibal Holocaust is that it has
all of these scenes of animal torture. Interesting. And it's not just that they're killing animals,
is that they're torturing animals, and they're torturing animals for the movie. So you could
call that snuff, depending on the kind of life that you qualify within that. Like there's a scene
of them, they catch a turtle, they're going to eat at a big sea turtle, and they torture it for a
couple of minutes. And like that's something that I can't unsee, and it was horrible. Yeah, that's
awful. Intentional infliction of pain in reality on a living thing, so that this horror film director
could make what he imagined to be some sort of a point about media. Which go ahead, make your point,
don't torture anything. Well, yeah, like don't do the thing that you're criticizing as you're
criticizing it. Yeah. It's like saying like porn is bad and rots our brains. I'm going to show you
like an hour and a half of porn, and then be like, you shouldn't be watching porn. Like that's, I
don't know, it just seems really cynical. It is. And that's not the only animal death there's several.
I was revisiting the list of the different deaths in it. And you know, when occasionally you're
reading a Wikipedia page, you're like, I appreciate the choices behind this. One of the deaths was
a tarantula, and I can see another list compiler being like, well, that's just a bug, whatever.
But you know, it's a tarantula. Yeah. You know that the movie wants to inflict pain on living
things. Do we know anything about the kind of person that enjoys watching snuff films? I mean,
it's really obvious or it seems obvious that like, if you like watching deaths, you're probably kind of
an asshole or like, that's the wrong way to put it. But it seems obvious that if you like watching
deaths, you probably have some mental stuff going on. Do we know if that's actually true? Or do people
just like watching deaths and then they're like really nice husbands and fathers the rest of the
time? I mean, again, because of the lack of actual snuff films, let's let's go back in time. We're
going back to 1963. If I say burning monk to you, what do you think of? Oh, I think of Vietnam. Yeah.
The protests, the monks protesting. The really iconic image that I think we tend to think of
was a monk named Quang Duc who emulated himself in 1963 to protest the South Vietnamese government's
persecution of Buddhists. Yes. And that was a government that was backed heavily by the United
States because it was anti-communist. So it wasn't protesting the war. It was protesting American
involvement in Vietnam. But it gets twisted around and becomes this Jane Fonda thing of like,
anti-war. It was about American backed anti-communist regimes. In fact, it was
entirely about our bad decisions and some key senses. But you know, this was an image that
became immediately iconic, I think, and the way that the Vietnam War really created so many
iconic images of human suffering because we didn't have those kinds of images of World War II,
but we did a Vietnam and have people running from napalm attacks. Like if I say that sentence,
you have an image in your head, right? Oh yeah. In journalism school, they always talked about how
when you ask people, what is the most censored war in American history, most people say Vietnam
because we assume that because there was this fight between the government and the press during
that time that there was censorship going on, Vietnam was actually the most uncensored war
in American history at the time. And World War II was the most censored war. There were plenty
of images of disgusting things from World War II that we did not see. A lot of the soldiers were
extremely miserable. The entire Pacific front was in tropical conditions. People were getting
boot rot and just horrible, disgusting things were happening, but nobody heard about it back home.
And when they came home, they were discouraged from talking about it. This is our grandparents
generation. And so we think of World War II as this nice, sanitized story, but that's because
of the censorship, not because of the actual war. So it makes sense to me that in the 60s was the
first time we saw images of what war was actually like and how complicated these countries we were
fighting over and about really were. You know, if you were going to the movies and seeing a news
reel about what was happening in World War II, first of all, you have it presented to you in
this unified narrative of the boys are going off to fight Jerry. And everyone's smiling and
smoking army-issued cigarettes the whole time. And you're seeing it outside the home. And I feel
like one of the really scary things that happened in Vietnam was that people had TVs. And in 1963,
you would turn on the nightly news and there would potentially be footage of something like
a monk emulating himself. And you would see it. And you would have this image inside of your home.
Your kid would see it. But another thing that I found really interesting in connection
with the monk narrative, a photojournalist named Malcolm Brown was the only photojournalist there.
And he took what became a Pulitzer Prize-winning photo of Kwan Duk and an interviewer speaking to
him in Time Magazine said, what were you thinking while you're looking through the camera? And
photojournalist Malcolm Brown looking back on this occasion said, I was thinking only about the fact
that it was a self-illuminated subject that required an exposure of, oh, say, F10 or whatever
it was. I don't really remember. That's terrible. That's what he was thinking about. I was using a
cheap Japanese camera by the name of Petrie. I was very familiar with it, but I wanted to make sure
that I not only got the settings right on the camera each time and focused it properly, but
that also I was reloading fast enough to keep up with action. I took about 10 rows of film because
I was shooting constantly. And the interviewer says, how did you feel? And Malcolm Brown says,
the main thing on my mind was getting the pictures out.
Oh my god, that reminds me of I've spent all week working on this article for which I have
interviewed people about some very emotional things. And I've had many people crying on the
phone to me this week at the end of like hour-long conversations, two hour-long conversations. And
there is like the part of myself that I hate the most is in these conversations when somebody's
telling me something really personal and there's a part of me in my head that's like, yes, I got it.
Like this is the story I'm going to use. And it's so terrible. There's this part of you
that's already thinking of how you're going to reprocess this into like a cute little anecdote.
You're like, ooh, I've got my opening story for my article. And it's so cynical. And immediately
after you do it, you're like, ugh, I'm terrible. But there is this part of you that's like,
I need to drill down on these stories or like, I need to get details that I can regurgitate.
I need to know. When your parents were abusing you, what was the brand of
boot they were kicking you with? Like you need these little details to retell the story.
He was menacing even in his hush puppies. Exactly. You need these details to make stories come alive.
And it's so terrible. This is the central task of journalism. But it's something that I feel
super impivalent about. Well, it's terrible because you become so predatorial in that moment.
You're like, yes, that's the thing I need. And it becomes this shiny object that you need to
grab and build your little bower with. Because all of a sudden you're not a person. You're a
journalist. Being a person in that moment is being like, oh my God, I'm so sorry you had to
experience that. And being a journalist is like, tell me more. How did it feel? What was it like?
How much blood was there? You need to like drill down on these things. Ugh. Can I ask,
why do you draw a line between this monk immolating himself and snuff films?
I feel like the things that that photojournalist said in that interview are kind of reflective
of what Ruggero Deodato is doing in Cannibal Holocaust 17 years later. He made the film partly
in response to Italian news coverage of political terrorism in Italy in the 70s. I feel like he
is responding in an inarticulate and regrettable, but ultimately, to me, a meaningful way. What it
does to you to be in the business of documenting and creating human pain as a horror filmmaker,
as someone working in media. And you know, so the Burning Monk is on TV. And 24 years later,
this was something that I went back and researched just kind of to do my due diligence, and then
was very surprised at what I learned. Have you ever heard of the suicide of Bud Dwyer?
No. This was, again, something that isn't snuff, but is sort of at the perimeter of snuff,
like one of the actual things that exists that's close to it. Or maybe is it depending on how you
define commercial distribution? To go back to your question, because Bud Dwyer was a, I think he
was this treasurer for the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania in the 1980s, and he was found to
have accepted a bribe from a private, I believe, an auditing company to do some sort of state financial
audit, something very boring. He accepted a bribe from an independent contractor so that
he would give them the appointment and he did. And this is the kind of thing that Pennsylvania,
which is a fairly corrupt state, public officials do this all the time, but he was prosecuted for
it. And he was ignominiously taken down and was being forced to resign. And he apparently could
not take this and call the press conference where he read a very long statement and then
read his final thoughts and then took out a gun and killed himself.
Oh, God, I have heard about this on live TV, right? I don't think it was being carried live.
The amazing thing about it is that the camera crews recorded it and then they all went home
and they went to their little studios and they edited their shows and some of them played the
death unedited. Some of them played footage of Bud Dwyer killing himself, not on live TV,
not accidentally, but on purpose. They went and they went to their editing suites and they put
together the broadcast and then they played it on TV. What? Yeah, they played it on TV. And one of
the fluky things that happened is that it was a snow day. And so kids in Harrisburg, which was one
of the cities that played the unedited footage, were home at the new news broadcast and saw it.
So there's also this generation of Bud Dwyer jokes known to Pennsylvania school children of the 80s.
Oh, God, did they give a disclaimer or anything like warning this footage contains disturbing,
etc? No. What? No, they were just like, this is news. We're going to put this on TV and this,
you know, in the spirit of, I mean, if you play an emulating, a self-emulating monk on live TV,
why not a state official killing himself? Oh my God. And I watched that footage this week too.
You did not. I did. What's it like? Well, it's just terrible because you're watching someone
who clearly, you know, he's been stripped of this title that gave his life meaning. He sees no way
out. The psychic pain that you're watching is really terrible. And then there's no gore when
he actually shoots himself. It happens very suddenly. And then there's this close-up of his
dead body as people around him react. And that was on the news. And the news stations in America
were like, we're going to put this on TV. This is news. People should see this. Why not? And it
wasn't with this feeling of like, people should see this, but it also wasn't with the feeling of
people shouldn't see this. It was just like, this is news. It literally happened today.
Oh my God. That seems so irresponsible, especially with what we know now about
the contagion of suicide and the way that suicide being framed can really harm people.
And I hate to use this word, trigger other suicides. Like, it's wild that they just like,
here's this footage. Yeah. And one of the examples that someone involved in this,
someone from one of the stations came up with, which makes sense in its way, is, well, look,
we put the Zapruder film on TV. We put footage of the Kennedy assassination on TV. Why not Bud
Dwyer? And it's like, well, in a way, it's the whole precedent thing.
Oh, I can't watch the Zapruder film either. I mean, even though it's grainy, even though it's like
far away, it's, I cannot. Yeah, it's terrible. It's a terrible thing to watch. And it is amazing
to me that we're living in a time when we're so much better able to access
horrifically violent imagery if we look for it. Yeah, it's really easy to find.
There is so much footage of actual death on YouTube that faces of death is because this
adorable, hokey old thing compared to it. But in 1987, there was just this completely
guileless sense of, well, it's news, isn't it? Of course, we're going to put Bud Dwyer
killing himself on TV. And we would never do that today. So it's not as if we're doing better,
but we're doing differently in some way. So in London 2012 Olympics, there was apparently
a vaulting injury. People don't know this. I used to do gymnastics. Gymnastics is an extremely
dangerous sport where there's more injuries in gymnastics every year than in football because
you're twisting your shoulders around and stuff and popping it out. So according to this friend
of mine on live TV, somebody had like a horrific vaulting accident. I asked him not to describe
it to me because I would faint, but apparently it was like rated R type injury in the vault.
And they showed it on live TV sort of accidentally. But very quickly, he said,
they cut away from it and they never showed it again. And they didn't even really talk about it
or they mentioned so and so was disqualified after an accident. But they didn't, I'm sure that if
you're a complete asshole, you can go on YouTube and find the footage. But like they were very
responsible about the fact that like someone has really been hurt here. They're in the ER. It is
physical human pain. We're just not going to show it and we're not going to talk about it and we're
not going to exploit it in any way. We're just going to move on, which I think is the correct
way to do it. I mean, it's obviously news when somebody kills themselves at a press conference,
but you don't have to show that act to describe that act. You can say, look,
we're really disturbing press conference today. This is the point where he pulls
out a gun and shoots himself. You can pause the footage and not actually show it. I feel
like that's what people would do now. And some stations did do that, but some played the whole
thing. And it is interesting what are the things that we would unconsciously assume it's necessary
to see with your own eyes, you know? And it also, of course, reinforces his intentions going forth
because he, everyone knows who Bud Dwyer is. Yeah, I guess it worked. His whole goal that he talked
about in his lengthy press conference pre-suicide was to establish the narrative that he had been
unfairly targeted by the legal system, which was true in a way because he was being prosecuted for
graft, which everyone was taking part in pretty much. But he did seem to develop this intense
victim complex about it and, you know, then kind of made himself a martyr on television and does get
to be remembered that way. So it's really reinforcing what we, I guess, work is completely
unsavvy about 1987, which is that if you allow someone to take their private vendetta to television
and convince, you know, and enact their personal narrative in a way that makes
other people understand it and validates the way they wanted to see themselves
through a spectacular death, then other people will probably do the same thing and it will
lead to other violent suicides. Yeah, it is actually surprising to me that there's no evidence
of snuff films because it always struck me as just like common sensical that, you know,
you set up cameras and you get people having sex in front of them. That makes sense. And then
you set up cameras and you beat somebody up or murder them in front of them. It just makes
sense that that would be a natural extension. It's interesting because I feel like we're
consistently able to in some way like emotionally connect with how heartless America is but not
describe the actuality of it in a plausible way. So the idea behind snuff is like there's just this
whole capitalistically motivated network of filmmakers and producers and distributors and
people who, according to Andrea Dworkin's idea of how it works, pay like $250 or like $1,000
to get a seat to see a snuff film that it's this extremely expensive, which therefore is able to
bankroll it kind of a venture and that people are signing on every day to kill people,
torture them on film as part of a job and that people want to watch this. And it's like, I mean,
yeah, kind of like look at the Vietnam War. Look at what we did to Vietnam. Look what we did to
American soldiers. Look at how most of our industries in America, at least the ones that
involve a significant labor force when those jobs still existed in the 1970s, involved destroying
someone's health and like you don't murder them on camera but you gradually give them colorectal
cancer. And some of the content in porn in the 70s and now does suggest this basic sense of
violence toward and hatred for women. And we do live in a violent society and Andrea Dworkin,
when she testified before the Mies Commission in 1986, talks about, you know, they said that
battery didn't exist. They said that rape didn't exist. They said that domestic abuse didn't exist
and women always knew that those things existed. And that's true. And I feel like snuff is something,
it is like the satanic panic. It is like so many of the things we've talked about where
it is like a specifically imagined thing that was a product of self-conscious human evil never
actually existed but all of the cruelty and indifference and desire to see other human
beings suffering was real. It was just that we didn't ever have such a deeply totemic object. We
had to suss out that argument from all these different sources and be like, see the burning
monks in Vietnam and the Bud Dwyer's and the deep throat and all these different things that come
together to tell us what kind of a world we're living in. We didn't have one perfectly expressive
item that did that. So we kind of made it up. So you're saying the real snuff film was in our hearts.
Like Father Christmas. But that's interesting in that that recasts faces of death for me because
then faces of death is exploiting the anxiety and fear of snuff films. It's not actually an example
of snuff films. It's playing on this idea that there are snuff films out there. I'm going to show
you one. So one of the reasons it made so much money probably is because there was all this anxiety
about snuff films. And then it's like, oh, I've heard about these things. I can finally go see one.
So does all this mean that snuff films never went away? They just became YouTube? I mean,
is that why we don't hear about snuff films anymore? Why there's no panic about snuff films?
We all just kind of assume that we're all watching a ton of death and we can go find death if we'd
like to see it anywhere. Well, and you know what's something that we don't even think of as watching
death, but that absolutely was September 11th? Oh, yeah. When you watch a building collapse
with people in it, you know what you're seeing on some level. We all were united as a country by
this experience of watching hundreds and hundreds of people die in an instant, basically. And it's
just something we've integrated into our national being. And then the first beheading video,
the first beheading video that was done by a terrorist organization in order to spread their
message through a terrorizing image, a terroristic image was the beheading of Daniel Pearl in 2002.
Which I have seen and I never want to see again. It's awful.
And I don't think I will ever be in a place to seek that out and see that or see it on purpose.
I mean, and is that something that you feel like you can't get out of your head, your mental image
bank? I saw it accidentally. I forget the circumstances, but I didn't like go seek it out. It was part
of a documentary I was watching or it was somehow it came into my vision non-voluntarily. I personally
don't think that I need to see horrible things to think that they're horrible. It ruins my day
and my week and my sense of value. And it makes me really sad and angry for days and weeks afterwards.
And so I try to avoid that stuff. I think it's important to know what the reality of things like
Daniel Pearl's murder in Abu Ghraib in 9-11. I mean, it's very important that we don't whitewash
those things, but I just as a person, I can't watch. How do you feel about it?
I mean, I don't watch beheading videos. I don't. Yeah, I feel the same way about it. And I feel
also that if you watch a beheading video specifically or some kind of video made by a
terrorist organization like the beheading videos that ISIS does, you're completing the transaction
that was begun by that organization. You become the reason that they made this. You become the
terrorized audience. And you don't have to specifically witness someone's pain in order to,
I think, have a basic understanding of what happened. And also, I think there's the false
sense when you watch someone die or something like that that you understand some deeper,
that you understand it in some way and you don't. I don't understand Bud Dwyer's life
from having watched him kill himself. And interestingly, I think to me, there's a dividing
line where I was like, okay, this was on TV, kids in Harrisburg saw it. I should see it and see what
that was like. And also, this was something that he chose to do to the extent that he was able to
make choices at that time. It's not someone being murdered to prove a point. I remember reading years
ago that in Japan, apparently, if you kill yourself by jumping in front of a train, they find
your family something like $10,000, because it holds everybody else up and you're affecting
everybody else like their commute. And there's something really gross about that. But there's
also something, I guess, pragmatic about it too, that suicide is an individual decision.
And I guess if you'd like to kill yourself, then fine. But don't do it in a way that
makes everybody else late for work. I don't know.
Maybe that does deter suicides, because if you have the sense of opportunity of the speeding
train and then you're like, no, I can't impose that debt on my family, that would be terrible.
And then you don't have another opportunity and it fades for the period.
Yeah. I don't know how that was relevant, but I just brought it up.
I guess in conclusion, I would ask you, would you ever watch Faces of Death?
Even knowing that it's fake, the little clip of it that I saw was probably fake.
But I mean, that scene in Django Unchained where the guy gets ripped apart by dogs,
that's also fake. And I also never want to watch that again.
So I am not planning on renting Faces of Death or going on YouTube anytime soon.
I hate whenever you find out that there's some rabbit hole on YouTube that you haven't gone
down yet. You're like, oh yeah, there are a lot of videos about eugenics on YouTube. You're like,
oh yeah, I guess it's like another horrible corner of the internet that I just don't ever
want to go down. But then you know about it and you have this feeling of like, well,
maybe I should for science. You know what I was watching the other day?
What? I don't know why I did this. I was watching boxing videos. If you type in Mike Tyson's best
chaos, there's like thousands of compilations and then that, of course, on the right hand bar
gets you to like best Evander Holyfield chaos. And I don't know why. Like I'm not into boxing.
I don't even like violence. I like look at the clock and like three hours had gone by.
What? And then of course now it's recommending me like boxing videos and things like super into
boxing. And I'm like, I'm never watching any boxing stuff again. It's just like that was a
weird thing that happened to me one day and it's never happening again.
It needs to have like an I'm over it button. It's like no, I'm done with that part of my
life. Whereas for me, no matter what I watch, we'll always play after a few
autoplay things go by Stevie Nicks and Lindsay Buckingham's debut album, Buckingham Nicks.
That's my boxing videos.