Sort of. It isn’t domestic abuse, it’s more the victim becomes the aggresser. It is a revenge movie, so the main character’s actions aren’t really seen as unethical or bad. The murders of the murders are very violent and are glorified by the movie.
Technically? I don’t know what constitutes a bully, this trigger is a bit unclear. One of the characters is beaten up by a neo-nazi. It’s only once and it’s not technically bullying.
A guy gets his eye stabbed out at about 35 minutes into the movie. It lingers on it for a while and the mutilation doesn't end with the stabbing. You may wanna look away until about 40 minutes or so.
About halfway in, a character gets attacked because another character is trying to keep from being killed by him. His eyeball comes out of the socket and is hanging down from the optic nerve onto his cheek. His underling tries to patch it up and makes it worse. He had it coming.
Becky struggles to breathe in two different scenes - she gets punched in the throat in one, and is outright choked in the other. One of the neo-Nazis gets stabbed in the throat and struggles to breathe as he bleeds out and dies.
Women shot in leg, continues bleeding. Dad is tortured with fire pit sticks prior to shooting. The an eyeball form someone else if gouged out and hanging.
The title character's mother died of cancer around a year before the events of the movie. We see flashbacks and video footage of her several times in the film.
Traumatic situations accur and the main character shows signs of trauma, but the movie takes place as it is happening. There are no flashbacks or any signs of ptsd, despite the main character being traumatized.
The main villain is a neo-Nazi, *however* there are no antisemitic remarks and he seems more focused on interracial relationships. Plenty of Nazi imagery, though.