Erm, well... A woman has been made pregnant by a cult and gets possessed by something evil (the foetus, I think). When she's just about due, she performs a crude caesarian on herself, and some cult members come and pull the baby from her womb as she's dying. It's pretty clear that they're not gonna leave the baby with her husband, so I guess it is an abduction. But then, the baby is most likely the Antichrist (or, actually, one of several antichrists), and I doubt that the husband would want to keep it...
The unborn evil child is the whole point. We don't see it directly inside the womb, but we see it on the screen during an ultrasound scan (and on a printed still of the scan afterwards), and on one occasion we see the woman's belly change its shape grotesquely as the unnatural baby inside it moves. Finally, we briefly see the baby when it's pulled from her opened belly/uterus.
The main characters, a married couple, are being watched throughout most of the movie, including with cameras secretly hidden in their house. At one point, the woman spots a man who's standing across the street, just staring at their house.
The wife becomes violent towards her husband, but it's because she's possessed, and he knows that. When she's not possessed, she's as loving as anyone, and their relationship is completely happy. I'm answering Yes in case the violence scenes might trigger someone in spite of the fact that the violent person isn't really her, just her body.
Technically, unless I missed something, no animals (except for a dog, who has its own category here) die on screen or after we've seen them alive. We see one or two deer that are already dead.
Technically, we don't know. A woman is taken, a ritual is performed with her, mostly off camera, and she's pregnant soon after. But since we're dealing with the supernatural, she might just as soon have been impregnated through other means than sex. For that matter, she might even already have been pregnant by her husband (she's on the pill, but it's still possible), and then the ritual had an effect on the foetus... but nah, probably not. In any case, we don't SEE any sexual assault.
An amniotic fluid sample is taken - i.e. a woman has a huuuge needle inserted into her uterus through the abdomen. We see the needle penetrating her skin and going in, though not super close up. The procedure causes her insufferable pain, because something is supernaturally wrong with the pregnancy/foetus, and she screams and writhes, begging the doctor to pull the needle out. This goes on for some long seconds, and we see her belly with the needle sticking out the whole time.
Pregnancy check-up scenes. Woman on an examination table, doctor scanning and testing. ... Also, a priest lying in bed in hospital after what he calls a mild stroke. .... There may be other hospital scenes, but I can't remember.
Technically, a person dies from bloodloss due to something extremely harmful they did to themselves, BUT 1) the person does it because they're compelled to by the evil they're possessed by, and 2) the direct purpose of the action is not to kill the person.
Hmmm... It gets kinda meta here... 99% of the movie is filmed as a home movie that a man is making for his future child, and some of the time he's speaking directly to the child through the camera, so to speak. So, while he's not addressing "us", the movie watchers, he IS talking to the camera while looking straight into the lens.
Not your regular birth... A possessed woman performs a crude caesarian on herself, but doesn't actually take the baby out. She bleeds to death while strangers take the baby from her womb.
A possessed woman performs a crude caesarian on herself, but doesn't actually take the baby out. She bleeds to death while strangers take the baby from her womb.
I didn't hear "lots of comments on sperm", just one (a joke during a pregnancy check-up at the doctor's). In another scene, a fully clothed man jokingly holds a breast pump in front of his crotch as if the device were meant to be used on his genitals. That's all.