Yes. (This trigger has already been posted here once.)
01:43:13 One character shoves?/puts? his nose into the crotch of a female character, which nobody notices despite being in a gd police station,
01:51:49 and a character thrusts up against another character against a door.
01:53:16-01:53:42 Failed attempt at rape, and in front of someone. It is during the climax of the story, but skipping it will not affect your understanding of the film.
Yes. 01:53:16-01:53:42 Failed attempt at rape. It is during the climax of the story, but skipping it will not affect your understanding of the film.
A male character attacks a female character while lucid and in control. It is very clear he intends to rape her, and in front of someone. It goes on a little too long to be an establishment of the horror or his intentions, which are already clear. The whole thing is also unnecessary. It was for shock.
Uh. Maybe...? A male character at 00:12:12 mentions "gay seniors" as an example of how artless and dead inside people have become. There's no connection between gay old men and what he's talking about, so I've put it here.
01:28:04 Someone is mentioned having a ripped out throat, mentioned again at 01:30:28
01:49:55 A man's neck is attacked, mauled.
01:50:27 A man is shown with his neck bloody and ripped, he is dead.
01:56:03 A man is shown bloody but you can't see his neck, it's implied. He is also dead.
Yes. 00:18:57 A male character stumbles and accidentally lands both his hands on a woman’s breasts. It takes him several seconds to realize. While it is a genuine accident on the character’s part this is literally nothing more than a moment for the writers and director to make a bro in-joke with the male audience about how funny it is to humiliate and assault a woman with all the originality and intelligence of "it was just a joke! cALM doWn” (I’m sure these three idiots were absolute 'riots’ in college if this is what they were like middle-age.)
01:25:07 Overhead shot. Woman is mostly covered by bedsheets, the man is fully covered. The next shot has the sheets further down. None of it is necessary.
01:43:14 In a busy police station in full view of whoever one character shoves?/puts? his nose into the crotch of a female character, which nobody notices or says anything about, but I don't see how no one could have seen it.
01:53:16-01:53:42 Failed attempt at rape. It is during the climax of the story, but skipping it will not affect your understanding of the film.
The whole time the female character's underwear is shown while she is being attacked.
This whole bit is unnecessary. There is no point to having him attempt to rape her except for shock.
There is also no male equivalent for the woman's state of dress, ever, which would take the pressure off the female character being ogled at by all the male personnel on the film and the male audience.
Yes and no. A male character appears much older than a female character, but they are both long into adulthood, and I think this question is leaning more towards someone who is barely out of adulthood or younger.
01:09:58 A scene where three muggers follow an older (white) male character into a dark tunnel. Two of the muggers are Black, one is mixed race.
01:24:54 Homeless Black man picking through garbage.
Any other people of colour in this film are far in the background or flash by the screen. Great story, but a sign of the times.
01:17:50 A male character voluntarily restrains himself with handcuffs on one wrist.
When the handcuffs are taken off they are promptly handcuffed behind his back. He's smiling about it and is willing, and he's pushed onto the bed.
01:50:43 A male character jumps a woman and covers her mouth, then threatens her and restrains her against a door. He's holding a fistful of her hair so she can't look away from him. For very special reasons he is much stronger than most people, and she can barely move. (she does get some room to move by playing him, and then she is able to knee him in the balls.)
01:54:38 A male character attempts to drown another male character, which seems to knock him out for several seconds. He seems dead actually but he isn't.
Three! The Black guy gets it the worst but he survives though he is not seen again afterwards.
00:04:50 'wolf' bite on a character's hand. Bandaged for part of the film.
00:32:10 Character bit on the hand. Bandaged for the rest of the film.
01:14:58 A character pulls two severed (Black) fingers out of their pocket. They also pulled out a bloody handkerchief.
Several moments where a male character comes in and out of lucidity.
Also he doesn't remember anything the next morning.
These moments are not treated as separate identities. He is not treated by others as if he is mentally unstable. It's more like "he was walking around in his bedroom, and now he's outside."
or seeing him lying in bed, and then all of a sudden he really wants to take a nightly run.
01:02:42 A lovely and helpful character declares his diagnosis that he is dying. It is not stated what illness, and he is not shown after this point, but he requests something special to stop the illness. It is rejected and he's understanding. Implied or left open to interpretation that he will get what he requested.
Yes. From afar and with heightened senses a male character begins observing bits and pieces of what people say.
A deer is hunted and watched (eventually killed). You see it coming, it's the only scene with a deer.
There are police that find out where certain characters are or will be as part of regular policework.
01:09:58 A scene where three muggers follow an older male character into a dark tunnel, but he knows he is being followed, and is amused by it. You can see the look on his face, but it's quick and subtle so you might miss it.
A woman observes a male character and a female character's argument.
For one second a male character outside a woman's home sees her silhouette through a window as he's looking for her. That same woman is caught by surprise by that same character a minute later, implying he was watching her, but the audience doesn't see him.
That's all I can remember, but it's as far as it goes. No one is watched for more than a few seconds.
Not death. (Maybe need another category?) I am putting yes due to a character being determined to not let something extreme happen to themselves. They are forced to let that extreme thing come to help someone. By the time that person is safe, what they were determined to stop has already happened.
01:13:40 for a character urinating on someone else.
01:43:13 One character shoves?/puts? his nose into the crotch of a female character, which nobody notices despite being in a gd police station.
01:48:28 Male character comments on a woman as looking "like the f* of the century or what". I felt gross writing that.
01:50:44 A male character is harassing and threatening a woman, but then kisses her neck and licks her a few times while she's terrified. She can barely move when it's happening, and that might affect some people to see this.
01:51:49 A character thrusts up against a female character against a door.
01:51:50 A female character is threatened to be "fucked to death".
01:53:16-01:53:42 Failed attempt at rape. It is during the climax of the story, but skipping it will not affect your understanding of the film.
Only mentioned and discussed. It's from a scientific viewpoint starting at 00:58:35
It's not even judgemental, the discussion even has this:
"Life is mystical. It's just that we are used to it."
and
"You'd rather be damned than die?"
"Damnation is not a part of my system of beliefs. The demon wolf is not evil unless the man he's bitten is evil."
Yes. 00:58:35, the religion bit starts at 00:59:18
There is an old doctor of several hypotheses and theories and he discusses religion, the occult, demon and animal possession, and mysticism with a male character. He published a book on the subject. He is very understanding and it is not judgemental at all.
I wish the Black/Brown/Asian spiritual advisor trope was listed here so I could say "No". The doctor is Indian and makes comments about what his "people" believe and that the male character (white) should see a shaman. However the whole scene is more of a scientific discussion.
The doctor does not give advice about connecting with the wolf spirit or finding his 'true power' and 'looking within himself' or anything like that. He gives advice about the theory of what might work as a cure, and he gives his scientific opinion. He admits to only knowing the theory.
A bit. A male character is handcuffed behind his back and pushed onto a bed by another character, end scene. It's the only part with handcuffs, and there is plenty of non-BDSM leadup so you know when it's coming.
Not really. 01:54:50 a character's body lands onto some concrete steps. It is a heavy, thick, bodily sound. Made me feel sick. They slip down maybe two steps to the ground. The character does not die from this.
01:54:16 A woman is thrown and knocked out. The audience next sees her a few minutes later awake and moving around fine.
01:54:38 A male character attempts to drown another male character and he loses consciousness. 01:54:50 that character then lands hard on the ground.
Again, I don't understand the "yes" vote. There is no stalking in this film.
Stalking is a concentrated effort to track someone down and watch them on purpose without them knowing, and even long after that person has said to stop following them, stop messaging them, stop calling them, and generally to leave them alone. (You can't just ghost the person and then whine "Stalker!" that they keep messaging you. You have to actually make your feelings known first so the other person knows how you feel. That's kind of how people work.🙄)
In stalking, efforts are made to find out where that person lives and works and what they are doing day-by-day. Notes are kept on what that person's route is and where they will be. Notes might also be kept on their behaviours and interests.
Each situation is different and context matters, but stalking is extreme.
Stalking is not just someone being annoying or someone "getting the last word in". Stalking is not someone standing up for themselves by messaging a person who has "noped" out of the conversation. It does not apply to miscommunications based in trying to repeatedly contact a person without getting any reply. It does not apply to police when it's part of an investigation that those police officers are assigned to investigate. And it certainly does not apply to watching/reading/liking each of someone's online posts when they make those posts available for anyone/everyone to do just that i.e. online stalking doesn't apply when someone connects all of their public accounts and they publicly post every detail of their life.
Stop spreading misinformation about real-world health and safety issues (I'm looking at you, people who abuse the term "gaslight").
There is no gaslighting in this film.
Gaslighting is a concentrated effort to make someone question their memory and their own sense of judgement. It is not simply lying.
Don't spread misinformation about real-world health and safety issues.
No animals are abused exactly, but there are a lot of scenes with horses frightened by the werewolf's presence, and a deer is killed when the wolf hunts it. There's also a wolf that gets hit by a car but appears to live.
Yes. The word "raped" is mentioned once at 00:12:13 by a male character.
A male character attempts (he fails!) to rape a female character at 01:53:16-01:53:42 It is during the climax of the story, but skipping it will not affect your understanding of the film.
Werewolf film, changing bodies, but not the full-body shifting of bones and such that is common in werewolf films of today. There is lots of hair, eye colour change, sharper larger teeth, and claws. The most body horror you will see is the quick closeup shot of a brutal hand-to-hand fight near the end 01:54:00-01:54:09
The main character bites off three fingers and a portion of a hand of a man who tackled him in a park at night. He later discovers the severed fingers in his pocket.
01:50:43 There's a hand over a woman's mouth and she is very deeply breathing through her nose. It's audible.
01:54:38 A male character attempts to drown another male character and he loses consciousness.
01:14:58 A character pulls two severed fingers out of their pocket. You don't see the bone but it is still graphic. They also pulled out a bloody handkerchief.
Characters get into fights and are attacked a few times, and you would think several would end with broken bones, but no, nothing is heard or seen, and there are no casts in this film.
Not a seizure, but some people might still get upset seeing this. A few times a character appears sick, delirious, unsteady on their feet, sweaty, and is breathing heavily. Their eyes roll back a couple of times, but it lasts a second or two. They do not drool from it and do not shake uncontrollably at any point.
Ahaha finally I get to contribute this one because this nearly made me stop the film - right at 01:54:50 a character's body lands onto some concrete steps. It is a heavy, thick, bodily sound. Made me feel sick. The character does not die from it.
Not how this question means it. The talk about possession specifically starts at 00:59:20 between one character and a doctor.
There's even this:
"You'd rather be damned than die?"
"Damnation is not a part of my system of beliefs. The demon wolf is not evil unless the man he's bitten is evil."
Werewolves, but no shifting body parts and bones when they change! None of those sounds!
00:04:50 a 'wolf' bites a man's hand.
00:32:10 A character's hand is bit. (I think the audio is only the growling in this moment, but paired with the visual, it might still trigger someone.)
00:51:25-00:51:46 Deer attack, including breaking the neck.
01:10:30-01:10:40 A male character attacks another male character in self-defense, but ends up removing two of the person's fingers in the process. Audio and shadows only.
01:48:46-01:48:52 A man is hit with a car and run down.
01:49:55-01:49:58 A man is attacked, his neck is ripped into.
01:54:00-01:54:09 brutal fight.
01:54:23 A male character is stabbed with a pitchfork. 01:54:27 He pulls it out, same audio.
Ahaha finally I get to contribute this one because this nearly made me stop the film - right at 01:54:50 a character's body lands onto some concrete steps. It is a heavy, thick, bodily sound. Made me feel sick, I think it's the goriest audio in the film.
00:51:25-00:51:46 Deer attack. It is not shown or stated that the deer was eaten but it's an easy assumption.
01:49:55 A man's neck is bit into as he is tackled. His throat is being attacked and it might have been partially eaten but it's not clear. There's no mention of it.
00:05:59 Spit, but you don’t see it. It’s off-camera. Only the sound.
00:14:03 Spit, and the sound, but it’s a dry one. Not wet and you don’t see anything.
01:55:46 and 01:56:27 Drool, not spit exactly.
There are police, but they are not shown to be of super-intelligence and capability. One of them says a creep of a line at the end too. This is not how cops investigate either, and the lead detectives in this film are kind of dim in the last quarter.
I'll put the last thing seen of the previous scene so someone can tell when it's coming:
A character says "I kiss 'em like I see 'em" then 00:10:17 this doctor visit opens with a closeup of an arm injection with a needle.
No hospital scenes. A character is seen by a doctor twice at different times in the film. I'll put the last thing seen of the previous scene so someone can tell when it's coming:
A character says "I kiss 'em like I see 'em" then 00:10:17 this doctor visit opens with a closeup of an arm injection with a needle.
A car speeds away as the sun rises then 00:53:52 this visit opens with someone's eye getting the little flashlight.
There are many instances of misophonia, which is why the "No" answers make no sense to anyone who knows the definition of the condition. I tried to catch the ones I could.
00:05:53 Gargling.
00:05:56 Swishing.
00:05:59 Spit, but you don’t see it. It’s off-camera. Only the sound.
00:06:22 Purses lips, then smacks them once.
00:07:00 Picking up a phone and dialing the buttons.
00:14:03 Spit, and the sound, but it’s a dry one. Not wet and you don’t see anything.
00:22:04 Turning off the lamp.
00:22:08 Alarm clock is LOUD. It's like a jumpscare so I'm not sure if this applies given the volume.
00:23:39 Dinner scene.
00:40:28-00:42:09 Peanut butter and jelly jam sesh, sandwiches for lunch.
00:57:12-00:57:20 Full mouth chewing, trying to talk at the same time. Sounds only.
01:10:40 Loud phone ringing. Another jumpscare. The ringing lasts for as long as the camera stays on the phone.
There's a lipsmack while a character is talking on the phone.
01:17:44 A pair of clinking handcuffs.
01:25:22 Light snoring.
01:28:25 Lipsmack.
01:35:58 Ringing phone.
01:36:02 Panting, heavy breathing for the phone call, and while in that room where the phone call took place.
01:45:14 pencil writing on paper.
01:50:46 A woman is very deeply breathing through her nose. It's audible. She is still deeply breathing somewhat after the person takes their hand off her mouth.
00:16:27 Anxiety attack.
00:17:45 A female character even identifies the cause of a male character’s issue as being anxiety. She specifically calls it an “anxiety attack”.
Uh. Maybe...? A male character at 00:12:12 mentions "gay seniors" as an example of how artless and dead inside people have become. There's no connection between gay old men and what he's talking about, so I've put it here.