Thread:Scottish-Terror/@comment-24758512-20190104041510/@comment-25008763-20190104050258

also it is still much better than stuff like Human Centipede, Where The Dead Go To Die or other overly edgy stuff.. exploitation is just that, films made to shock.. they aren't meant to be things to make you feel great and getting overly angry about them is also stupid, just move on.. it's like getting angry at Family Guy or South Park for being offensive, it's just what they do.. it's what exploitation has always done.

the cannibal subgenre was a very offensive one that relied on racial stereotyping from both ends, that's why I find it stupid how people are trying to double-standard the actions of tribes etc in these films - when the very subgenre was designed to prey on fears of the "savage" and "unknown".. it's a subgenre that died for a reason.

CH is unique in it went the other direction but that created an equally offensive stereotype in which a tribe is seen as pure and godly, despite being very much dangerous - heck, Disney did the exact same with Native Americans in Pocahontas, portraying them all as good and noble.. when any work depicts an entire people as "good" or "bad" it becomes stereotyping.. this wiki should look at such works and realize it's not okay to have it either way : neither side is good in these types of settings.

it's funny how Warhammer, for all its edge and grimdarkness, made a more balanced look on things since EVERY race is dubious, evil or somewhat capable of being seen as "bad" in that setting - that at least avoids the noble-savage or evil invader BS a lot of the "explorer" genre films have.