The film's primary social commentary targets the "social justice warrior" culture and "slacktivism".
Roth highlights how the activists are more concerned with their social media "likes" and trending status than the actual plight of the indigenous people. The Green Inferno
The Green Inferno serves as a "love letter" to Italian cannibal exploitation films like and Cannibal Ferox . Directed by Eli Roth, the film follows Justine, a naive college freshman who joins a group of activists traveling to the Peruvian Amazon to stop an energy company from destroying an uncontacted tribe's habitat. The title itself is a direct reference to the film-within-a-film from Cannibal Holocaust . The film's primary social commentary targets the "social
The ultimate irony occurs when the very tribe the students sought to "save" captures and systematically consumes them following a plane crash. The Green Inferno (2013) - IMDb Directed by Eli Roth, the film follows Justine,
This paper explores Eli Roth’s 2013 film , examining its role as both a gruesome homage to the "cannibal boom" of the late 1970s and a modern satire of contemporary activism.
The group arrives with a sense of moral superiority, assuming their intervention is altruistic, while the film portrays it as a modern form of imperialism fueled by vanity.
1. Introduction: Reviving a Forgotten Subgenre