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The following seven movies are all well worth watching. However, audiences should not expect to press play on them ever again.
7) Room

Room is an agonizing story about Joy (Brie Larson) and her son Jack (Jacob Tremblay), who try to adjust to normal life after being held hostage in a tiny shed for seven years. It’s simply impossible to imagine living and raising a child under such horrid circumstances. Room sugarcoats nothing about the pair’s recovery from such extreme trauma and abuse following their nerve-racking escape from captivity. The aftermath proves to be a massive struggle for Joy, whose experience takes a toll on her mental health, and Jack, who was born in the shed and understands little of the real world. Audiences should watch Room for Brie Larson’s Oscar-winning lead performance and for the film’s deep exploration of its characters. Room deals with the topics of depression, suicide, and rape, and its heavily emotional narrative is hard to view more than once.
6) Requiem for a Dream

Requiem for a Dream paints an unbelievably bleak, yet important, portrait of drug addiction from the perspectives of four characters. All of their arcs are horrible to witness, particularly that of Sara Goldfarb (Ellen Burstyn), whose tragic decline fills much of Requiem for a Dream‘s run time. A near-constant depiction of humans’ physical and mental suffering, Darren Aronofsky’s film is raw and intense from start to finish, which explains its NC-17 rating. Despite its countless distressing scenes, Requiem for a Dream is a must-watch. The film’s character-driven approach deftly captures how drugs can derail people’s lives under various circumstances. Most people who watch Requiem for a Dream won’t regret it. However, not many will be able to handle its disturbing content a second time.
5) The Long Walk

The Long Walk, based on Stephen King’s novel of the same name, ranks among the most brutal and somber movies in recent memory. In a dystopian 1970s United States, 50 teenage boys participate in a walking competition for an enormous cash prize. The penalty for failure to maintain their pace is instant death, and almost everyone perishes in a gruesome way. The Long Walk takes time to flesh out its characters’ personalities and backstories, making their violent executions all the more devastating. Nearly everything that happens in The Long Walk is appalling. Even so, the growing friendship between Ray (Cooper Hoffman), Pete (David Jonsson), Art (Tut Nyuot), Hank (Ben Wang), and others injects a heartwarming element of humanity into the film. Viewers will be sick to their stomachs many times while watching The Long Walk, but the journey is worth the pain.












