Heads Up, Ears Down

This blog accurately identifies depictions of violence and cruelty toward animals in films. The purpose is to provide viewers with a reliable guide so that such depictions do not come as unwelcome surprises. Films will be accurately notated, providing a time cue for each incident along with a concise description of the scene and perhaps relevant context surrounding the incident. In order to serve as a useful reference tool, films having no depictions of violence to animals will be included, with an indication that there are no such scenes. This is confirmation that the films have been watched with the stated purpose in mind.


Note that the word depictions figures prominently in the objective. It is a travesty that discussions about cruelty in film usually are derailed by the largely unrelated assertion that no animals really were hurt (true only in some films, dependent upon many factors), and that all this concern is just over a simulation. Not the point, whether true or false. We do not smugly dismiss depictions of five-year-olds being raped because those scenes are only simulations. No, we are appalled that such images are even staged, and we are appropriately horrified that the notion now has been planted into the minds of the weak and cruel.


Depictions of violence or harm to animals are assessed in keeping with our dominant culture, with physical abuse, harmful neglect, and similar mistreatment serving as a base line. This blog does not address extended issues of animal welfare, and as such does not identify scenes of people eating meat or mules pulling plows. The goal is to itemize images that might cause a disturbance in a compassionate household.


These notes provide a heads-up but do not necessarily discourage watching a film because of depicted cruelty. Consuming a piece of art does not make you a supporter of the ideas presented. Your ethical self is created by your public rhetoric and your private actions, not by your willingness to sit through a filmed act of violence.

Mur murs

Mur murs. Agnès Varda, 1980.

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Edition screened: Included in Criterion Blu-ray box set The Complete Films of Agnès Varda (disc 6) released 2020. French language with English subtitles. Runtime approximately 82 minutes.


Summary: Prolonged and depressing implications.


While there are no actual depictions of pigs being murdered and butchered, there is a lengthy scene depicting an enormous mural that wraps around the entire exterior of a slaughterhouse/meat processing center, beginning around 1:02:00. The painting depicts the lives of pigs ranging from bucolic normalcy to their being herded into livestock trucks, also interjected with that creepy commercial tendency to depict pigs standing erect like humans and smacking their lips about bacon or leering lustfully into a barbecue pit. The focus is on the mural, intercut with brief interviews with indifferent employees, a scene of workers sharpening their butchering knives, and several quick images of carts of meat. 


I thought this long scene ruined the movie. Prior to viewing I was rather indifferent to Mur murs’ topic but then enjoyed the somewhat tedious film to some degree up until this “Farmer John” sequence, which pushed me back to No.