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Donnerstag, 05 Dezember 2024 21:57
The Australian government has issued a stern warning to horror fans flocking to
cinemas to see the ultra-violent slasher film Terrifier 3, cautioning audiences about its extreme
content and disturbing themes.
The film, directed by Damien Leone, has drawn huge crowds since it's release on October 10,
as it continues the blood-soaked saga of Art the Clown with more gruesome, stomach-churning scenes.
The movie has broken box office records as horror enthusiasts are lured in by the film's reputation for intense violence and shock value.
The Department of Infrastructure, Transport, Regional Development, Communications,
and the Arts has warned Australian audiences to prepare for
scenes of graphic violence, dismemberment and disturbing
themes that go well beyond typical horror fare.
The film includes brutal depictions of murder using a variety of weapons,
from chainsaws to axes and guns, resulting in explicit injury detail
and copious amounts of blood.
The warning also highlights that the movie portrays
self-harm, cannibalism, animal cruelty and violence involving children, pushing the boundaries of what the most hardened horror
fans has seen before.
One of the film's more controversial moments includes a
scene of implied masturbation coupled with self-harm, along with a shower scene that hints at sexual
activity.
The Australian government has issued a stern warning to horror fans flocking
to cinemas to see the ultra-violent slasher film Terrifier 3, cautioning audiences about its extreme
content and disturbing themes
The film, directed by Damien Leone, has drawn huge crowds
since it's release on October 10, as it continues the blood-soaked saga of Art the Clown with
more gruesome, stomach-churning scenes
In addition, male genital nudity and obscured shots of female breast and buttock nudity have caused concern among viewers and
the classification board alike.
The film's R18+ rating in Australia is due to its high
impact violence, blood, gore and explicit sexual content.
Despite these warnings, audiences have turned out in droves.
The Department of Infrastructure, Transport, Regional
Development, Communications, and the Arts has warned Australian audiences to
prepare for scenes of graphic violence, dismemberment and disturbing
themes that go well beyond typical horror fare
Many cinema-goers in Sydney and Melbourne reportedly clapped and cheered during some of the film's most grotesque
death scenes.
This latest instalment of the Terrifier franchise is a continuation of the sadistic horror unleashed by Art the
Clown, a character who has now become a modern horror icon for his relentless brutality.
In Terrifier 3, Art's reign of terror continues, once again targeting Sienna Shaw who narrowly survived his attacks
in the previous movie.
Sienna, portrayed by actress Lauren LaVera, takes on Art in a deadly showdown that is as
gory as it is horrifying, featuring scenes
of decapitations, dismemberments and visceral body horror.
Read More
'Traumatising' horror sequel leaves two Perth moviegoers unconscious and one injured
The Terrifier franchise, which began in 2016, quickly gained a cult following due to its extreme
violence and over-the-top death scenes.
The first film, which saw Art the Clown mutilate a victim with a
hacksaw, shocked audiences with its brutal kill sequences.
The sequel, Terrifier 2, went viral last year after reports emerged that viewers were fainting and vomiting in cinemas due to its graphic content.
Now, with Terrifier 3, Leone has doubled down on the
carnage, taking the gore to new, unsettling levels.
Despite Australia's strict film censorship laws, Terrifier 3 was approved for theatrical release with a strong warning attached.
The film's notoriety has only heightened its
appeal to horror fans, who continue to fill cinemas across the country.
Earlier this month, two people fainted and fled for the exit when it
hit a Perth cinema for early previews.
According to multiple eye witness accounts, one young woman badly injured
herself after she fell down the cinema stairs while fleeing
the movie theatre.
'This is going to sound made up and I promise you it's
not,' Australian horror film critic Emma Clarke began her review of David Leone's controversial new horror-slasher.
The Rotten Tomatoes verified critic said two people fainted
right in front of her during the screening she attended at Innaloo Cinemas in Perth over the weekend.
The first fainted during the opening scene, she said in her film review shared to YouTube, and the second nearer to the end of the
two-house spectacle.
'Can you tell me... why did two people feint right
in front of me during that film?' she said.
'Both trying to run down the stairs to get to the bathrooms because they
felt so queasy.'
The horror film fanatic said she spoke to both people and tried to assist them because she
was seated directly behind them.
The first was a man, who left with a friend who came to check on him,
and second Australian victim was a young woman.
'This poor girl gashed her head open as she fell down the stairs,
I felt so bad for her. I went and checked on her afterwards,' Clarke claimed.
'She did get help. She was with her friend.
It really shook me up too. It actually took me out
of the film for the moment.'
The reviewer, who has been sharing her thoughts on scary movies for
the past four years, said she has never seen audience members have such a
visceral reaction to a film.
Many cinema-goers in Sydney and Melbourne reportedly clapped and cheered during some of
the film's most grotesque death scenes
Clarke described the third installment of Leone's series —
which is set to open nationally on Thursday, October 11 — as ' fun, intense, gory,
disturbed, and over the top.'
'I'm not used to horror actually hurting people, so that was a really
strange experience,' she said.
'Before anyone says they're paid actors, I
saw the girl and she had injuries. They were both very young people.
I feel really awful about it to be honest.'
'It was a very scary moment trying to help
them out.'
SydneyMelbourne -
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iqos iluma ione
Donnerstag, 05 Dezember 2024 21:55
July 23 (Reuters) - Philip Morris International pushed the
test-launch of its heated tobacco device, IQOS, in the U.S.
to the fourth quarter on Tuesday and lowered its annual forecast for the heated tobacco business.
The pilot was earlier scheduled to run in Austin, Texas, in the second quarter, for
which the company reported results on the day.
The company declined to comment on why the launch had been delayed.
Philip Morris has invested billions to promote and expand its portfolio of alternatives to traditional combustible cigarettes amid stricter regulations and falling smoking rates in some markets.
The launch of its flagship heated tobacco device
in the United States is also facing resistance from health campaigners, who have written to regulators in the country accusing the company of misrepresenting past regulatory decisions, Reuters reported last week.
The company also awaits market authorization from the U.S.
Food and Drug Administration for its IQOS ILUMA device, which it expects by the second half of 2025.
A ban on flavored heated tobacco in the European Union has already
hit shipments this year, with Philip Morris saying the
impact from the ban was "slightly greater" than previously assumed.
This led the company to temper its expectations for volume growth in the heated tobacco category to around 13% for the full year,
down from between 14% and 16% expected earlier.
However, Philip Morris topped quarterly expectations and raised its annual
sales and profit forecasts, betting on demand for its Zyn nicotine pouches, as well as higher cigarette pricing.
(Reporting by Juveria Tabassum and Emma Rumney;
Editing by Pooja Desai)
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