The Green Inferno Review ◎

Elias hit 'Publish' and closed his laptop. He looked at the leftover pasta sitting on his kitchen counter and, for the first time in his life, decided he wasn't really a fan of red sauce.

A significant tension within the film lies in its depiction of the indigenous tribe. Critics have accused the film of racism, arguing that it portrays Amazonian natives as mindless monsters. However, a deeper reading suggests the tribe is depicted as an extension of the jungle itself—amoral and ferocious. the green inferno review

The story follows Justine (Lorenza Izzo), a naive college freshman who joins an activist group led by the charismatic yet suspicious Alejandro. Their mission is to travel to the Peruvian Amazon to stop a logging company from destroying a remote rainforest and displacing its indigenous inhabitants. Elias hit 'Publish' and closed his laptop

The story follows a group of student activists from NYC, armed with nothing but smartphones and a staggering amount of naïveté. They head to the Amazon to stop a petrochemical company from destroying a village. In a twist of pitch-black irony, their plane goes down, and they are "rescued" by the very tribe they were trying to protect. Critics have accused the film of racism, arguing