Two characters are tied up in Storm Drain.
The doctor restrains his patients to surgical tables in The Subject.
The white supremacist group ties a man up with chains before shooting him to death.
Two women tie a man to a chair and then beat him to death.
The doctor amputates his patient's limbs. Stumps are visible, as well as animatronic limbs.
A re-animated dead body falls to pieces, including his hands and part of his face.
Faces burned off by acid - first one
very horrific head injury gruesome, in half - second one
lots of mutilation including of head, gross shooting of a head and dismemberment, awful skull and brain bashing - third one
a lot of head squished in the last one. so gruesome.
The doctor's subjects are tortured with various inhumane experiments including amputation, brain surgery, and fusing their bodies with electronic apparatus.
The Ratman short features black goo coming from people's mouths. When we meet the first man, black spit sorta pours out of his mouth a little. There is another part later on where someone gathers black saliva into a little container. Near the end, one of the characters spits black goo onto the desk before onto another character in larger quantity. This part really triggered my emetophobia.
It happens in a few scenes, but more-so the end of it is the worst part.
In the doctor short, when one of the characters sees a patient, he gags for a bit but does not vomit.
If anything, it's the opposite. The SWAT team on a "drug raid" is clueless and ineffective in the film.
A police officer is in league with a white supremacist group.
The movie ends with a song called "Dead Cops" over the end credits.
All segments are filmed as though they were made with a video camera circa 1994. Lots of static noise, popping and whirring throughout the entire film.
Loud, repetitive alarms in more than one segment.
Storm Drain features a local news format that has reporters talking to the camera in a way that suggests characters are speaking to the audience.
An infomercial breaks into a segment to "advertise" a fictional product to the film's audience.