France, June 1944. On the eve of D-Day, some American paratroopers fall behind enemy lines after their aircraft crashes while on a mission to destroy a radio tower in a small village near the beaches of Normandy. After reaching their target, the surviving paratroopers realise that, in addition to fighting the Nazi troops that patrol the village, they also must fight against something else.
This movie contains 38 potentially triggering events.
No, but there may be a trigger anyway: There's a nasty scene in which a Nazi enters a woman's home and coerces her into having sex with him by threatening to take her brother away to be experimented on. He doesn't physically overpower her, but she has no choice. It's made clear that he's abused his power over her for the same purpose several times before (on a regular basis, it sounds like). The rape is stopped before any actual sex takes place (he has just ripped some of her clothes open and pulled down her panties), but it's still very unpleasant to watch.
No, but a sweet child is treated rudely by an American soldier, scared in general and specifically several times due to the dominating, evil Nazis, and kidnapped by them to be experimented on.
No real world drugs (that I noticed), but a fictional drug in liquid form, which does überbizarre things to people, is administered via injection by the movie's Naizis in cruel experiments. Also, one good guy gives it to a friend in an attempt to revive him, and two people take the drug themselves. All injections are given with a stabbing motion - all in the chest or in the thigh, I think - not carefully into a vein.
No, but it appears an animal may have been abused (been experimented on) before dying as a result thereof or being killed. We only see the animal as a disgusting mess of a cadaver, and it can't be identified as belonging to any known species.
Soon after landing, the soldiers comes across a disgusting mess of a cadaver that they at first think is a dead dog, but which turns out to have hooves. We never find out just what it is, but it must be some kind of animal - likely some sort of abomination resulting from the Nazis' biological experiments.
A human-turned-monster takes at least one bite out of someone (presumably killing them) off screen, then we see a chunk of flesh dropping from its mouth. That's close enough to cannibalism to warrant a yes, I think.
I don't remember any amputation taking place, but someone (a sort of human monster) is missing part of his arm, and we see a living, talking woman's head with nothing left of her body apart from the spine.
Pretty much turned into a puddle (which is shown), with the hilt of a rifle. Also, someone is shot in the face and lives on with a considerable part of the face (flesh and bone) missing.
A bad guy is strung up, beaten and stabbed for the purpose of extracting information. A number of innocent people are held captive in a lab - locked up, contained in hanging sacks of fluid or strapped to operating tables and the like -and experimented on about as horrifyingly as one can imagine. One example: There's a woman who's only a head on a spine, but still alive and suffering.
No, but a little boy is in terrible danger; he gets taken away to be experimented on, screaming for his older sister as he's driven off. He's later found strapped to an operating table, but in the end he comes out of the ordeal physically unharmed.
Lots of people have been kidnapped for experimentation before the movie and are either dead or still in captivity. A few people are kidnapped for the same purpose during the movie, including a little boy, who we see and hear screaming as he's taken away.
I think people have misunderstood the question. There are contorting/contorted, transforming/transformed bodies (turning monstrous), NOT body dysmorphia.
Crawling through a pretty narrow tunnel. Hiding behind things. Plunged into water and hampered by a parachute when trying to emerge. Held captive in relatively small cells. Possibly other stuff, too.
----------- SPOILER --------- Technically, yes - in the end a good guy blows himself up inside/along with a building to obliterate the bad guys and their lab and end the suffering of the poor, lost people they've been experimenting on. He was beyond healing/rescue anyway.
No, but it's alluded to by an American soldier: "We all know what the Krauts will do to a guy named Rosenfeld" (or something like that), spoken to the guy named Rosenfeld.
It’s a movie about fighting Nazis, what do you think? There are also a number of N**i symbols shown on screen (though not the swastika).
On the plus side, the Jewish person and the main character Black man both survive, and no one specifically insults them for their ethnicities, which was a pleasant surprise.
I didn't notice anyone drowning, although some probably did - several American soldiers drop into a lake when their plane is shot down. There's an unpleasant scene in which we see one of them hitting the bottom of the lake, struggling to get out, hampered by his parachute. He makes it, emerges from the lake gasping for air. Later on, a bad guy holds a good guy's head under water in a basin for a number of seconds, but the good guy comes out unharmed.