Parents' Guide to

In a Violent Nature

By Jeffrey M. Anderson, Common Sense Media Reviewer

age 17+

Intensely gory, but also unique, thoughtful slasher movie.

Movie NR 2024 94 minutes
In a Violent Nature Movie Poster: A killer in a mask yanks a hook connected to a chain as something spatters in the air

A Lot or a Little?

What you will—and won't—find in this movie.

Community Reviews

age 16+

Based on 4 parent reviews

age 17+

Awesome flick

I am a huge horror movie fan and I absolutely loved this movie The Kills were original it was gory and they focused more on the Killer it was almost like you were playing a video game and Looking Through The Eyes of the Killer
age 15+

THIS is not a movie worth watching

If you are a fan of the titles Halloween, Jason, Freddy Krueger, This MIGHT be a decent movie for you, but even if you do enjoy horror involving the main character walking around killing everything in sight I still wouldn't recommend this movie my daughter and I enjoy going to the movies and this was a HARD pass. I wouldn't even recommend this as a redox rent. And the ending was horrible as well. Talk of sex was brought up alot in this movie (no actually sex scenes) but enough o feel uncomfortable looking at it with a 12 year old.

Is It Any Good?

Our review:
Parents say (4 ):
Kids say (2 ):

This mesmerizing, deliberately paced horror/slasher movie may not scare traditional horror fans, but its unique rhythms and compositions ask fresh, intriguing questions about the bloody genre. The feature writing and directing debut of Chris Nash, who contributed a short to the 2014 ABCs of Death 2 anthology movie, In a Violent Nature is closer to something like Gus Van Sant's Elephant than it is to Friday the 13th Part 2 (though Lauren-Marie Taylor, who appeared in that 1981 slasher classic, shows up here as a good samaritan). Shot in the narrow Academy aspect ratio of 1.37:1, much of the movie takes place from the point of view of the supernatural killer as he stalks endlessly through the woods. There's no music score, so the sounds of thunking footsteps and the swishing of bushes and branches moving aside (and sometimes engines and other unsettling sounds) act as music.

Until the story gets down to the "final girl," we rarely see non-monster characters in close-up or even at all; they're frequently off-camera or out-of-focus and in the distance. Some of the kills—such as two flirtatious campers next to a lake—seem familiar in concept, but in execution, they're drastically different. And a nail-biting final sequence will likely enthrall, irritate, or confuse most viewers. It seems as if Nash wants viewers to ponder what they're watching here and why—and what could possibly be the appeal of slasher movies. Or, perhaps, to go one step further, maybe it's "nature" itself that's a threat. Regardless, In a Violent Nature is a brilliant movie that's worth seeing more than once for further unpacking.

Movie Details

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