One of the most controversial Films ever made featured an X-rated scene so graphic it was banned worldwide.
Director David Cronenberg, widely considered the principal originator of the sub-genre body horror, is famous for his provocative and twisted movie style relating to the human body.
His popular titles include The Fly, A History of Violence, and The Brood.
Yet another film of his is particularly controversial, with people even today disgusted by it.
Discussing the erotic thriller, one person writes: “This so weird, sick and twisted.”
Another adds: “I am completely confused on how and why the directors, producers, and whoever wrote this.”
“This movie was depraved, dark, and altogether unnecessary,” a third person says.

The controversial horror film’s issues began with its initial screening at the Cannes Film Festival.
The festival’s jury created the ‘Special Jury Prize for originality, for daring and for audacity’ to evade the intense dislike harbored towards it by The Godfather director Francis Ford Coppola, who was jury president, as per BBC Culture.
Following the film’s release, it faced intense pressure to be banned.
Late British film critic Alexander Walker said it went ‘beyond the bounds of depravity,’ per the BBFC (the British Board of Film Classification).
The Daily Mail and Evening Standard led a campaign aiming for its ban, leading some places in the U.K. to stop showing it.
Westminster Council even prohibited the film from being shown in areas of London, while Norway also banned it from cinemas, as per the daily star.
In the U.S., AMC Cinemas posted security guards on its doors to prevent minors from slipping in and seeing it.

The twisted horror follows a car crash victim who suddenly finds himself turned on by car accidents and becomes involved with an underground subculture of like-minded souls.
Based on the J.G. Ballard novel of the same name, it stars James Spader, Holly Hunter, Elias Koteas, Deborah Kara Unger, and Rosanna Arquette.
It features numerous s** scenes, with one involving the protagonist using his manhood to penetrate a scar on a disabled woman’s leg.
The BBFC was asked to view the erotic thriller in October 1996. It determined that the film was ‘not intended to be taken literally’ and examined its topics metaphorically.
The governmental organization also sought the advice of experts and a psychologist ruled it wouldn’t incite dangerous or copycat behavior.