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{{Otheruses4|the genre|the 1976 film|Snuff (film)|the 2005 film|Snuff-Movie (film)}}
A '''snuff film''' or '''snuff movie''' is a [[motion picture]] genre that depicts the actual death or [[murder]] of a person or people, without the aid of [[special effects]], for the express purpose of distribution and entertainment or financial exploitation. Though deaths have been captured on film, snuff films as commonly defined are generally regarded as an [[urban legend]].<ref name = snopes>
{{cite web
| url = http://www.snopes.com/horrors/madmen/snuff.htm
| title = A Pinch of Snuff
| accessdate = 2007-04-08
| publisher = snopes.com
}}</ref>

==History==

The first recorded use of the term "snuff film" is in a 1971 book by [[Ed Sanders]], ''The Family: The Story of Charles Manson's Dune Buggy Attack Battalion'', in which it is alleged that [[Charles Manson|The Manson Family]] was involved in making such a film.<ref>{{cite web
| url = http://www.snopes.com/horrors/madmen/snuff.htm
| title = A Pinch of Snuff
| accessdate = 2007-04-08
| publisher = snopes.com
}}</ref>

The metaphorical use of the term ''snuff'' to denote killing appears to be derived from a verb for the extinguishing of a candle flame. The word has been used as such in English slang for hundreds of years. "Snuff and toddle" is listed in a book of boxing terminology from 1827 as meaning a fatal knock-out <ref>Eric Partridge, ''A Dictionary of Slang and Unconventional English'', vol. 1 p. 796; vol. two p. 1097; citing the Anonymous ''Every Night Book'' of 1827</ref>. J.C. Hotten lists the term in the fifth edition of his ''Slang Dictionary'' in 1874 as a "term very common among the lower orders of London, meaning to die from disease or accident." The word is descended (via the Middle English "snuffen" or "snuppen"<ref>Bible in [[Wyclif]] tr. (i.e. 1384) ''Exodus'' xxv.38 "where the snoffes ben quenchid"; cf. xxxvii.23</ref>) from the Old English "snithan", meaning to slaughter and dismember, from "snide", meaning to kill by cutting or stabbing, from "snid", to cut.

The [[Michael Powell (director)|Michael Powell]] film ''[[Peeping Tom (film)|Peeping Tom]]'' (1960) featured a murderer who filmed the deaths of his victims. The concept of a "snuff movie" became widely known in 1976 in the context of the commercial film ''[[Snuff (1975 film)|Snuff]]''. Originally a low budget exploitation horror film about a Manson family murder spree, the film's distributor added a new ending that depicted an actress being murdered on a movie set. Promotion of ''Snuff'' created the illusion that an actual murder had been captured on film. The producer wrote angry letters of complaint to the ''[[New York Times]]'' and hired people to act as protestors to picket screenings.

In the wake of ''Snuff'', many films examined the idea of murders being staged for an entertainment film. These including the [[Paul Schrader]] film ''[[Hardcore (1979 film)|Hardcore]]'' (1979), the [[Ruggero Deodato]] film ''[[Cannibal Holocaust]]'' (1980), [[David Cronenberg|David Cronenberg's]] ''[[Videodrome]]'' (1983), the [[Arnold Schwarzenegger]] film ''[[The Running Man (film)|The Running Man]]'' (1987), the [[Nine Inch Nails]] film ''[[Broken (1993 film)|The Broken Movie]]'' (1993) the film ''[[Henry: Portrait of a Serial Killer]]'' (1986), the [[Alejandro Amenabar]] film ''[[Tesis]]'' (1996), the film ''[[Strange Days (film)|Strange Days]]'' (1995), the [[Anthony Waller]] film ''[[Mute Witness]]'' (1994), the [[Joel Schumacher]] film ''[[8mm (film)|8mm]]'' (1999) and was featured in the [[John Ottman]] film, ''[[Urban Legends: Final Cut]]'' (2000), Fred Vogel's film ''[[August Underground]]'' (2001) and its sequels.

Internet snuff movies are alluded to in the [[Marc Evans]] film ''[[My Little Eye]]'' (2002), the [[Showtime]] series ''[[Dexter (TV Series)|Dexter]]'' and the film ''[[Halloween: Resurrection]]''. Most recently the subject has been addressed in British film director [[Bernard Rose (director)|Bernard Rose]]'s film ''[[Snuff-Movie (film)|Snuff-Movie]]'' (2005), the [[Nimród Antal]] film ''[[Vacancy (film)|Vacancy]]'' (2007) and also in the WWE film ''[[The Condemned]]'' (2007) and the [[Gregory Hoblit]] film ''[[Untraceable]]''. [[Rockstar Games]], the controversial game publisher, released the snuff-themed [[Manhunt]] in 2003. The 2007 murder of Sergei Yatzenko by the [[Dnepropetrovsk maniacs]] is one of the example of widely disseminated snuff movies.

==Recorded murders==
Some murderers have recorded their acts on video. Documentary film makers have also captured footage of executions or accidental deaths. The resultant footage is not usually considered to be a snuff film because the deaths were not staged to be the subject of an entertainment film.

===Documentary footage===

As early as the 1940s, [[Weegee]] found fame for his photographs of victims of street crime in [[New York City]]. In later decades, the American public was fascinated by the [[Zapruder film]] of the [[assassination of John F. Kennedy]]. ''[[The Passenger (film)|Professione: reporter]]'', a film directed by Michelangelo Antonioni, features an actual execution by firing squad. The stabbing murder of [[Meredith Hunter]] by a [[Hells Angels|Hell's Angel]] at the Rolling Stones [[Altamont Free Concert|concert at Altamont Speedway]] is featured in [[Albert and David Maysles]]' documentary film ''[[Gimme Shelter (documentary)|Gimme Shelter]]''. The 1995 documentary film ''Executions'' showed several actual executions of people condemned to death.

On [[September 11th, 2001]], millions of people viewed heavy rotation television footage of people jumping to their deaths from the burning [[World Trade Center]] in [[New York City]]. It is possible to download from the [[internet]] videos depicting actual murders or deaths including those of [[Daniel Pearl]], [[Nick Berg]], [[Saddam Hussein]], [[Paul Marshall Johnson, Jr.|Paul Johnson]], [[Kim Sun-il]], [[Eugene Armstrong]], [[Jack Hensley]], [[Kenneth Bigley]] and a Russian sergeant, the shooting of [[Yitzhak Rabin]], and the gun suicides of [[Ricardo Alfonso Cerna|Ricardo Cerna]], Ricardo Lopez and [[Budd Dwyer]].

In none of these cases was the death deliberately conducted for a film. The footage was either of a real event and shot for documentary purposes, or the murder was committed as a political assassination, and recorded for political purposes. Therefore the resulting footage can not rightly be called a snuff film. Since it is trivially easy today to produce a film that simulates a murder in a believable way, there is little commercial incentive to risk the legal repercussions of producing a film in which a murder is actually committed (much less documented on film).

===Real life murders===

Several murderers have recorded some of their crimes.

In the early 1980s, murderers [[Charles Ng]] and [[Leonard Lake]] videotaped the torturing of women they would later kill. Serial killers [[Paul Bernardo]] and [[Karla Homolka]] videotaped some of their sex crimes in the early 1990s. Though their crimes ended in murder, the actual murders were not videotaped. Only a select few people have ever seen this footage, as viewing was restricted to lawyers and other courtroom personnel. The footage has since reportedly been destroyed. In 2001 murderer [[Armin Meiwes]] videotaped the killing of Bernd Jürgen Armando Brandes.

In 1997, the Germans Ernst Dieter Korzen and Stefan Michael Mahn kidnapped a prostitute and recorded her torture. The two men were sentenced to life imprisonment. Prosecutors involved in the case claimed there is an international market for porn videos.<ref name=doesexist>[http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=-2695085153314436603 Does Snuff Exist?], ''[[The Dark Side of Porn]]'', Season 2 Episode 4, [[Channel 4]] documentary, first aired 18 April 2006</ref><ref>
{{cite news
| last = Frew
| first = Callum
| title = Perverts murdered woman for snuff movie
| work = [[Daily Record (Scotland)|The Daily Record]]
| publisher =
| date = 1999-04-13
| url =
| accessdate = 2008-06-17}}
Perverts Murdered Woman for Snuff Movie, ''[[Daily Record (Scotland)|The Daily Record]]'', 13 April 1999</ref>

==False snuff films==
===The Guinea Pig films===
{{Main|Guinea Pig (film series)}}
The first two films in the Japanese ''Guinea Pig'' series are designed to look like authentic snuff films; the video is grainy and unsteady, as if recorded by amateurs. In the late 1980s, the Guinea Pig films were one of the inspirations for Japanese serial killer [[Tsutomu Miyazaki]]'s murders of preschool girls.<ref>
{{cite web
| url = http://www.crimelibrary.com/criminal_mind/psychology/movies_made_me_kill/11.html
| title = Serial killer inspired by Guinea Pig films
| accessdate = 2008-06-17
| publisher = guineapigfilms.com
}}</ref>

The most infamous Guinea Pig film is probably ''[[Flower of Flesh and Blood]]'', in which a woman is drugged, then chained to a bed as a man in a [[samurai]] costume slowly kills her through [[torture]] and [[dismemberment]]. After viewing a portion of this film, actor [[Charlie Sheen]] was convinced the murder depicted was genuine and contacted the [[MPAA]], who then contacted the [[FBI]].<ref>
{{cite web
| url = http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0000221/bio
| title = Biography of Charlie Sheen
| accessdate = 2007-05-31
| publisher = imdb.com
}}</ref>
FBI agent Dan Codling informed them that the FBI and the Japanese authorities were already investigating the film makers, who were forced to prove that the murders were indeed fake.<ref name=snopes/><ref>
{{cite web
| url = http://www.guineapigfilms.com/History.html
| title = History page
| accessdate = 2006-11-16
| publisher = guineapigfilms.com
}}</ref>

While the actual Guinea Pig movies are not snuff films themselves, two of them are purported to be based on real snuff films. ''The Devil's Experiment'' was supposedly based on a film sent to the Tokyo police in which a small group of people dismember a young woman in an attempt to see how much damage the body can take. ''Flower of Flesh and Blood'' was supposedly made after manga artist, [[Hideshi Hino]], received a letter, 54 stills, and an [[8 mm film]] through the mail. The letter described what was on the film. He watched it and shortly after turned it over to the Tokyo police, who could not identify either the girl or the murderer. However, the snuff-film stimulus has been shown to be false as the film is in fact based on a Hideshi Hino manga <ref>http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Guinea_Pig_%28film_series%29#Flower_of_Flesh_and_Blood</ref>.

===Other alleged snuff films===
Italian director [[Ruggero Deodato]] was once called before a court in order to prove that the murders of humans depicted in his film ''[[Cannibal Holocaust]]'' had been faked.<ref>[[Cannibal_Holocaust#Original_Italian_controversy|Wikiarticle about "Cannibal Holocaust" film]]</ref>

The ''[[Boston Herald]]'' newspaper published an article on the subject of such murder films being shown in the Boston area, while articles on the Channel 1 computer bulletin board news groups alluded to such films and claimed they were made in New York City.{{Citation needed|date=July 2008}}

In 2000 an [[Italy|Italian]] [[police]] operation broke up a gang of [[child pornography|child pornographers]] based in [[Russia]] who, it was claimed, were also offering snuff films for sale to their clients in Italy, Germany, the U.S. and U.K. It is unclear whether anything other than child pornography films were ever seized.<ref>[http://observer.guardian.co.uk/uk_news/story/0,,375883,00.html UK arrest of Kuznetsov]</ref>

In 2009 [[Wallace Souza]] was arrested for allegedly ordering murders in order to boost ratings of his TV show.

==In fiction==

Snuff films have occasionally inspired fictional works (such as [[Michael Powell (director)|Michael Powell]]'s 1960 film ''[[Peeping Tom (film)|Peeping Tom]]'' and ''[[Videodrome]]'' in 1983). [[Reginald Hill]]'s [[Dalziel and Pascoe]] novel ''[[A Pinch of Snuff]]'' (1978) which involves a purported British snuff film was later televised. As noted above, there was a wave of such films in the mid-to-late 1970s, and the mid-to-late 1990s saw another cycle of snuff film-inspired motion pictures. ''[[The Great American Snuff Film]]'' tries to take the viewer inside the mind of a killer who seeks revenge for his abusive foster home upbringing, by kidnapping two girls to make a snuff film. ''[[Mute Witness]]'' (1994) depicts the heroine's discovery of a snuff film in progress. ''[[Strange Days (film)|Strange Days]]'' (1995) revolves around several snuff films involving murders of prostitutes and high-profile African American civil rights heroes. The Spanish horror movie ''[[Tesis]]'' (1996) revolves around a student discovering a library of snuff films hidden in a room beneath her college. ''[[8mm (movie)|8mm]]'' (1999) is a similar movie about a private investigator hired by a widow to determine if the film her husband kept hidden in a safe is a real snuff film. ''[[Hardcore (1979 film)|Hardcore]]'' (1979) showed [[George C. Scott]] watching a snuff film to find his runaway daughter. ''[[My Little Eye]]'', a 2002 [[Marc Evans]] horror film depicts the story of several teenagers in a [[Big Brother (UK)|Big Brother]] style house who end up being part of an elaborate live snuff movie. Similar to this is ''[[Halloween: Resurrection]]'' which features several deaths occurring on web cameras. ''[[FeardotCom]]'' and most recently ''[[Untraceable]]'' revolve around victims who are slowly tortured to death live on the internet. ''[[The Brave]]'' (1997) tells the story of a man who agrees to be in a snuff film in return for $50,000 to help his poverty-stricken family. Polish movie ''Billboard'' (1998) is a story of an ad agency worker who discovers a snuff tape apparently recorded on the set where he works. Most recently, the film ''[[Vacancy (film)|Vacancy]]'' concerns a couple who discover their motel room is the site of a series of snuff movies. A more post-modern take on illusion, reality and sexploitation in this genre is taken in British film director [[Bernard Rose (director)|Bernard Rose]]'s 2005 film ''[[Snuff-Movie (film)|Snuff-Movie]]''.

The premise of snuff films was also used as a theme in the [[Rockstar North]] [[video game]] ''[[Manhunt (video game)|Manhunt]]'', which revolved around a convict named James Earl Cash, whose death is staged on live television at the order of a mysterious director in order for him to star in a series of [[cat and mouse]]-style snuff films.

Snuff films that reveal the existence of [[vampires]] appear as plot devices in the video game ''[[Vampire: The Masquerade - Bloodlines]]'' and the anime ''[[Hellsing]]''. In the manga series ''[[Gunslinger Girl]]'', it is later revealed that one of the characters was a victim of a snuff film, rescued shortly before her recruitment.

Snuff films were also the premise of [[Chuck Palahniuk]]'s ''[[Snuff (novel)|Snuff]]''.

The following novels reference snuff films:
* [[Roberto Bolaño]]'s ''[[2666]]''
* [[Bret Easton Ellis]]' ''[[Less Than Zero (book)|Less Than Zero]]''
* [[Thomas Harris]]' ''[[Hannibal_(novel)|Hannibal]]''

==References==
{{reflist|2}}

==Further reading==
*David Kerekes and David Slater. ''Killing for Culture: Death Film from Mondo to Snuff (Creation Cinema Collection)''. London: Creation Books, 1996.

==External links==
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Snuff Film}}
[[Category:Film genres]]
[[Category:Filmed deaths]]
[[Category:Murder]]
[[Category:Urban legends]]
[[Category:Violence]]

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Revision as of 06:05, 16 January 2010

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