I believe there are no children in the movie apart from the unseen, talking foetus, whom we see as a normal newborn at the end. The foetus may get knocked around a bit due to a kick to the mother's stomach and a stumble/fall or two, but apparently isn't harmed by it. Nothing bad happens to the baby after it's born, but it probably won't have a healthy childhood, what with its mother being mentally ill and capable of coldblooded murder.
In the pet store scene as well as in later flashbacks: a huge centipede, some sort of grub being eaten by a reptile, a tarantula and another big spider, maybe more.
Several throats are slit, and we see it quite clearly, including a gaping wound when one of the victims' neck is tilted back after the cut. A man's upper thigh/groin/testicle is slit. There's stabbing, too.
Hmm... In the DJ's flat, a testicle is cut off in an instant with a sharp knife and lands on the floor. Not in a medical way/setting. We don't see the knife going into the flesh.
In the DJ's flat, a testicle is cut off with a sharp knife through the man's trousers. We don't see the cut going into the flesh, but we do get a close-up of the testicle landing on the floor.
Technically no, since we don't see or hear him fall (it happened before the events of the movie), not even in flashbacks. BUT we do see the horrifying and sickening "result" of the fall - directly (his head) at the end of the movie , and indirectly (erm, some matter on rocks) in the first scene.
No, but the (super unlikeable) adult son of an old lady is killed. She sees him lying murdered on the floor, but having dementia, she reacts as if it were a broken vase or something. A moment later, she talks as if her son were alive, so there's no mourning.
A woman murders a man who is expecting a child with his girlfriend. We don't know the couple well. --- For those who, like me, have a problem with seeing old persons sick, feeble, suffering or dying: In one scene (the DJ's flat) there's an old woman with dementia. It's not too bad, though. I can have major problems with dementia in movies, but this didn't really bother me. We don't see her decline, we're not emotionally attached to her, and she isn't portrayed as suffering (even though her son treats her badly while he's alive, AND even though she sees him lying murdered on the floor; she doesn't truly realise what she's seeing, but reacts as if he were a broken vase or something). This scene is all we see of her, and there are no other elderly people in the movie.
The main character, who murders in cold blood, definitely seems to be mentally ill (grief-triggered pre- and postpartum psychosis?), although the movie does leave it ever so slightly ambiguous as to whether she is in fact being controlled by her evil foetus/baby.
Lights: I don't think so. Images: Some somewhat distorted, blurry and pretty fast cuts while the main character is walking through town at night, and some pretty fast cuts in flashbacks.
No. But I'll mention here that the whole movie is about a woman who has snapped mentally/emotionally because she can't handle being pregnant while grieving her dead boyfriend, and who puts herself in dangerous situations by attacking people who might or do fight back. I'll argue that she has some sort of pre- and postpartum psychosis. She says as one point that she'd trade the still unborn baby for having her boyfriend back alive. So, the whole pregnancy thing is a deeply negative business here.
No. But I'll mention here that the whole movie is about a woman who has snapped mentally/emotionally because she can't handle being pregnant while grieving her dead boyfriend, and who puts herself in dangerous situations by attacking people who might or do fight back. I'll argue that she has some sort of pre- and postpartum psychosis. She says as one point that she'd trade the still unborn baby for having her boyfriend back alive. So, the whole pregnancy thing is a deeply negative business here.
No, but she's kicked in the stomach at one point - in the kitchen in the "charity for children" scene. ____ I'll mention here that the whole movie is about a woman who has snapped mentally/emotionally because she can't handle being pregnant while grieving her dead boyfriend, and who puts herself in dangerous situations by attacking people who might or do fight back. I'll argue that she has some sort of pre- and postpartum psychosis. She says as one point that she'd trade the still unborn baby for having her boyfriend back alive. So, the whole pregnancy thing is a deeply negative business here.
No. But being overweight is mentioned in a bad way: An extremely unlikeable man incredibly doesn't realise that the woman he's taken home for a one-night is pregnant; he thinks she's just overweight. This emerges when he tells her that he fancies fat (he uses that word) women, clearly seeing her as one. Being the jerk that he is, he seems to think that this is a compliment that she'll appreciate. (Soon after, he realises that she's pregnant.)
--- SPOILER --- SPOILER --- SPOILER --- Towards the end of the movie, we're made to think that the woman has gotten over her murderous obsession and her hatred towards her baby, but in the last scene it turns out that she hasn't. Doesn't bode well for her child's future, or her own.