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LONG
PIGS
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Anthony Alviano gives quite a strong performance for a film that's considerably small budget as he manages to pave his own path as a cannibalistic foodie who takes delight in stalking and picking out his victims he deems suitable to eat. This role could have easily turned in to a poor man's Hannibal Lecter, but Alviano seems to rely on his own individual charms and quirks to garner his own rather disturbing cannibal monster who is guiltless and merciless in his pursuit to indulge in long pig. He makes no exception, no excuse, he doesn't apologize and he racks it up to primal urges, which is at first suitable for his two documentary filmmakers following him on his hunts, and soon becomes a problem when they manage to get too close to his misdeeds and realizes they're apart of the vicious crimes instead of playing observers. The questions asked with Anthony is if he's feeding an addiction and some deeply sexual urge, or is he just pure evil in an average man's skin who uses cannibalism as an explanation for his horrible murders? "Long Pigs" succeeds in being a very engrossing and deeply disturbing mock documentary that will touch even the most cynical viewers because the directors provide some truly grotesque special effects, along with Alviano's brutally harrowing and convincing performance as a man who loves to eat other people, and can turn on anyone he pleases in a split second if the hunger strikes. And there's even a small interlude where the character of Anthony is asked why he never eats children, and it's much more gruesome than you'd expect. Meanwhile the directors delve in to his psychology, a man who is without limits who has his own. This is a man who somewhat takes pride in killing a child, but demands respect and privacy from others when a relative of his passes. Is this the indication of a man with an erratic sense of ethics, or just a madman posing as an aristocratic chef? Of course the film is not all about shocks as it is about thought provoking questions about cannibalism that many will ask themselves only if they're capable of thinking beyond their own disgust, and that's what "Long Pigs" attempts to do in the end, it offers up questions while also revealing a predator who could turn you in to the prey at a moment's notice.
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