Religion itself isn't discussed, however this may bother someone senstive to religious trauma and/or suffered sexual/physical/emotional abuse within the church:
Spoiler: The lead female character enters a church and has a conversation with a priest who turns out to be a villain. During their conversation he upsets her by justifying the physical abuse she suffered at the hands of her husband and he also blames her for her husband's suicide. Later in the movie the priest sexually harasses her in her bathroom and attempts to rape her (while wearing his clerical clothing, collar, and a cross pendant).
No demons or mentions of hell, but the men the lead character encounter are not ordinary humans, or really human at all, and they chronically stalk and terrorize her.
Dislocation/fracture. The husband of the lead character is shown dead after falling/jumping from a balcony. His right ankle is shown severely fractured and twisted out of place.
Spoiler:
Later, the "men" are shown with the same injury. Then the husband appears again after supposedly being "birthed" by one of the men and the same injury is seen. *I have no idea how to explain that any better.
I would say this is the biggest warning for the movie as it happens to the main character pretty much throughout. Her husband tries to tell her she's "making herself the victim" by being upset at his threats to commit suicide. A vicar tells her she drove her husband to suicide, and that him hitting her was not a big deal.
The main character is repeatedly stalked throughout the movie by a man. When she attempts to go to the police about it, they are dismissive of her. This escalates towards the end of the film.
Yes. The lead female character is briefly restrained when pushed onto the bathroom countertop during an attempted rape. In another scene, shortly after, she is restrained/dragged against her will by her hair.
The husband of the lead female character can be viewed as an abusive bully who is shown punching her hard in the face which causes her to fall backwards.
In the third act of the movie, the vicar grabs the main character's vagina through her dress. He then tries to force himself on her but it is not carried out.
Yes, and it's fairly gruesome. Spoilers: -The lead character's husband is shown dead after he fell/jumped off a balcony and landed partially on a spiked metal fence. One of his hands is shown with one of the spikes penetrating through it, along with the blood from the wound.
-One of the stalkers/intruders puts his arm through the front door's mail slot and the lead character stabs him in the arm. He then drags his arm back through the slot and the knife tears through the remaining length of arm and the hand until its split in half lengthwise. You later see him hold up the bloody, multilated extremity after he is discovered in the kitchen playing with the corpse of a dead bird.
Spoiler --
Mans arm sliced from elbow to fingers, a very extended scene where a man gives birth to himself over and over, a man has cuts all over his body and puts a leaf in his face cut, man has spikes and plants growing out of his skin. Man is impaled on a fence. 2 male characters walk on a visibly broken ankle.
A "man" dressed as a priest is stabbed in the abdomen with a knife. A "man's" arm is stabbed with a knife. Another man's hand is seen punctured by a spiked metal fence.
There’s a young character involved in the final graphic sequence, but it’s an adult man’s face superimposed on a younger body, not a sympathetic character
There’s no vomit but towards the end of the film The Green Man dribbles a bright green liquid for about a second. Very quick but could possibly be triggering
There isn't any specific illness stated, however the lead character's husband is clearly unstable and displays patterns of behavior consistent with having a personality disorder. He is verbally and physically abusive, he ignores personal boundaries, he gaslights, he's paranoid, and he attempts to manipulate his wife using threats of suicide.
No, but the ending sequence could easily be seen as transphobic as it involves men doing something associated with women and it is portrayed as horrific and comedic
A black man abuses his white wife. He is the only black character. He's never implied to be representative of all black people or all black men, but I understand why this depiction would rub people the wrong way.