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9 of the most disgusting body horrors you need to watch-Rebecca Sayce-Entertainment – Metro

You won’t look at your body the same way again.

9 of the most disgusting body horrors you need to watch-Rebecca Sayce-Entertainment – Metro

These are some of the gooiest, goriest, grossest body horrors you can stream right now (Picture: Empire/Everett/REX/Shutterstock)

Horror has long utilised the real-life anxieties we have surrounding our bodies.

From everyday anatomy changes to the fear of disease and death, body horror replicates the gooey and gross aspects of the human experience to terrifying effects.

The latest gross and gory film set to hit our screens is The Substance, directed by Coralie Fargeat and starring Demi Moore and Margaret Qualley.

Set to be released in cinemas on September 20, it follows ageing starlet Elisabeth Sparkle (Moore) as she embarks on an experiment known as the substance, a clinical procedure which promises to create ‘a better version of you.’

The horror currently holds an impressive 91% on Rotten Tomatoes and has been credited with successfully launching Moore’s big-screen comeback.

In preparation for the ‘insane’ film, we have rounded up some of the most disgusting body horror films you can stream right now – from 80s classics to controversial modern releases ready to shock and appal.

The Fly

Before winning the hearts of audiences across the world in Jurassic Park, Jeff Goldblum disgusted cinemagoers in David Cronenberg’s The Fly.

Loosely based on George Langelaan’s 1957 short story and the 1958 film of the same name, the film tells the story of eccentric scientist Seth Brundle (Goldblum) who, after one of his experiments goes wrong, slowly turns into a fly-hybrid creature.

Where to watch: Disney Plus and Apple TV

The Thing

One of the most famous sci-fi horror films of all time, 1982’s The Thing features some truly groundbreaking body horror and special effects.

Directed by horror legend John Carpenter, it tells the story of a group of researchers in Antarctica who encounter an extra-terrestrial being that infects then assimilates its human hosts – leading to paranoia among the group as any one of them could be ‘the Thing.’

Where to watch: Available to rent on Prime Video, Apple TV, Rakuten TV, and the Sky Store

Tusk

Written and directed by Kevin Smith, Tusk was released in 2014 and centred on Wallace Bryton (Justin Long), the co-host of a viral video-mocking podcast who comes across a flyer from Howard Howe (Michael Parks) offering a room in exchange for hearing what he says to be interesting stories.

After accepting the man’s offer, Wallace quickly finds himself in a life-threatening situation due to Howard’s obsessions with a walrus named Mr Tusk who he says saved his life.

Where to watch: Available to rent on Prime Video, Apple TV, Rakuten TV, and the Sky Store

Tetsuo: The Iron Man

Shinya Tsukamoto’s feature debut Tetsuo: The Iron Man would go down in history as one of the most influential films to come out of Japan.

It centres around an unnamed Japanese salaryman (Tomorô Taguchi) who slowly turns into a man-machine hybrid after accidentally killing a being known as The Metal Fetishist (Tsukamoto), and develops a hit-and-run victim who is undergoing a similar transformation.

Where to watch: Available to rent on Prime Video and Apple TV

Will you be adding these gory body horror films to your watchlist?Comment Now

Videodrome

The ‘king of body horror’ Cronenberg appears again on our list with his grim 1983 hit Videodrome.

Starring James Woods, Sonja Smits, and Debbie Harry, the film follows CIVIC-TV president Max Renn (Woods) as he attempts to uncover the signal source of a broadcast showing snuff films, but as he does so, he experiences intense hallucinations that cause his grasp of reality to falter.

Where to watch: Now TV and Sky Go

Society

If you loved the light body horror in Barry Keoghan’s smash hit Saltburn, 1992’s Society directed by Brian Yuzna takes us into the secret world of the elite with plenty of twists and turns.

Its plot follows Beverly Hills teenager Bill Whitney (Billy Warlock) who begins to suspect that his wealthy family and friends are part of a gruesome cult for the social elite who engage in murderous orgies – but the truth, somehow, is far worse.

Where to watch: Arrow and the Arrow channel via Prime Video

Re-Animator

Jeffrey Combs, Barbara Crampton, Bruce Abbott, and David Gale all appear in Stuart Gordon’s Re-Animator, a grotesque adaptation of H.P. Lovecraft’s 1922 novelette.

The infamous 1985 film follows medical students Herbert Wise (Combs) and Dan Cain (Abbott) who create a serum to re-animate the dead, bringing back Cain’s fiancée (Crampton).

Where to watch: Available to rent via Apple TV

Invasion of The Body Snatchers

Though sci-fi body horror Invasion of The Body Snatchers first hit our screens in 1956, the 1978 remake by Philip Kaufman really kicks the scares up a notch.

When Elizabeth Driscoll (Brooke Adams) complains of her husband’s strange mood, her co-worker Matthew Bennell (Donald Sutherland) assumes it’s marital issues, but it soon becomes clear something more is afoot when writer Jack Bellicec (Jeff Goldblum) and his wife (Veronica Cartwright) discover a mutated corpse.

Where to watch: Prime Video

The Human Centipede

Earlier this year, director Tom Six said his latest film may never be released because it is ‘too extreme’ – and as the creator of The Human Centipede, it’s easy to imagine why.

The controversial film follows psychopathic surgeon Dr Josef Heiter (Dieter Laser) as he kidnaps tourists in a bid to conjoin them surgically, mouth to anus – and two similarly grotesque sequels follow with even longer centipedes to, erm, enjoy?

Where to watch: Available to rent via Apple TV and Rakuten TV

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