8 Horror Movies With Deeper Meanings Than You Realise

8. Normal Is Relative - Raw

The representations in Raw mirror that of any bloody gore-fest focussing on women: the horrors of growing up. Puberty is a scary thing, and with it comes all the blood, hair, and sexual liberation a young girl could wish for in a lifetime, then a dollop more for good luck. Raw's embrace of these bodily changes comes through loud and clear, and like in Carrie, and Ginger Snaps, and for all those other monstrous women in cinema, Justine is left stronger, stranger, and sexually awakened by her mysterious affliction for cannibalism. But that's not all that director Julia Ducournau was going for.

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Ducournau has stated that she wanted to create a scenario that makes watchers consider what they're seeing and how it relates to our own perception of normality - how cannibalism might seem like this grand, terrifying statement, but in actuality it's an average part of cultures across many other parts of the world: “I thought it was very funny how people tend to qualify as monstrous or inhuman deeds that are actually very human... Cannibalism is part of humanity. Some tribes do it ritually and have no shame doing it."

It's perhaps best encompassed by her quipping "this thing is in us, we just don’t want to see it." Raw is the acceptance of the horrifying as just a part of subjective human nature, something we fold into ourselves and carry on as normal. Identity is purely relative.

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