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  1. Before the film started Boll emphasized the brutality of the film. Furthermore, he pointed out that PETA, who receive 2.5% of worldwide sales of the film, made archival recordings of animal cruelty available for the use in Seed ' s introduction, [2] though this footage was obscured on-screen.

  2. Spoiler Alert. This movie is extreme even by extreme horror standards. Within the first 10 minutes it shows a dog getting tortured, and it isn't hinted at either. The dog getting tortured is shown right at your face and you miss nothing at all. That was just the first 3 minutes of the movie.

  3. humanehollywood.org › production › seedSeed - Humane Hollywood

    A serial killer who is sentenced to die by electrocution survives, only to go on a brutal killing spree. Not Monitored. Animal Action. Seed. Release Date: April 27, 2007. Certification: Not Monitored. WARNING**** This film contains graphic footage of animal cruelty that was provided by PETA, according to the warning in the beginning of the film.

    • Vadim Rizov
    • “Electrocuting An Elephant” (1903) This list is meant not as a grim catalog of animal abuse for its own sake, but as a list of accidental or deliberate harm done to animals in the process of creating filmed entertainment.
    • Stagecoach (1939) Although still remembered as one of Hollywood’s greatest stuntmen, doubling for John Wayne throughout the 1930s, Yakima Canutt is also somewhat notorious among animal-rights activists for having invented the glorified trip-wire known as the Running W. In the book Hollywood Hoofbeats: Trails Blazed Across The Silver Screen, Petrine Day Mitchum discusses the horrifyingly simple device in great detail, explaining how “wires attached to the horse’s forelegs were threaded through a ring on the cinch and secured to buried dead weights,” so that “when the horse ran to the end of the wires, his forelegs were yanked out from under him.”
    • Ben-Hur (1925) With their whirling, Batmobile-style wheel-destroyers, the chariot races in 1959’s Ben-Hur still stun audiences 50 years after the fact, but they’re nowhere near as dangerous as the scenes in the 1925 version.
    • Jesse James (1939) Jesse James was one of the biggest hits of 1939, matching the take of Frank Capra’s hit Mr. Smith Goes To Washingtonthe same year.
  4. It features video of animal cruelty (Thats real) & extremely disturbing. Apparently this is what the character gets off on. That & kidnapping people & locking them in a dungeon like cell & watch them via closed circuit camera slowly starve to death.

  5. Plot. Max Seed was the worst serial killer in history. As a boy, he was disfigured in a school bus crash in Sufferton, which killed everyone else. Because of that he weared a mask since then in order to hide these disfigurements. After that, in 1973, he began torturing and killing people.

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  7. Nov 3, 2006 · Before the film started Boll emphasized the brutality of the film. Furthermore, he pointed out that PETA, who receive 2.5% of worldwide sales of the film, made archival recordings of animal cruelty available for the use in Seeds introduction, though this footage was obscured on-screen.

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