Unthinkable 2010 Dvdscr Xvidrx
Critics were harsh. Variety called it “a torture-porn thriller masquerading as political philosophy.” The New York Times gave it a scathing review, calling it “irresponsible and grotesque.” On Rotten Tomatoes, Unthinkable holds a 31% approval rating.
But audience scores told a different story. On IMDb, it climbed to 7.0/10. On forums like Something Awful and Reddit, users praised its refusal to offer easy answers. The film ends on an ambiguous, deeply unsettling note: H is shown sawing off a bound man’s hand while the bomb timer ticks down to black. No resolution. No catharsis. unthinkable 2010 dvdscr xvidrx
One of the strangest ironies of Unthinkable is that many people watched it illegally because they refused to “pay for torture porn.” Others watched it legally on DVD or streaming (later Amazon Prime, Tubi, and Pluto TV). But the piracy community engaged with the film on a philosophical level. Critics were harsh
Threads on Reddit’s r/movies (circa 2011) argued: The irony of watching a stolen copy of
The irony of watching a stolen copy of a film about state-sanctioned theft of human dignity was not lost on everyone. Some commenters joked, “I’m just testing H’s methods by stealing this movie.”
Unthinkable, directed by Gregor Jordan and starring Samuel L. Jackson, Michael Sheen, and Carrie-Anne Moss, is a tense psychological thriller that asks a disturbing question: How far should the government go to prevent a nuclear terrorist attack? When a man known as "Younger" (Sheen) plants three nuclear bombs in undisclosed U.S. cities, a black-ops interrogator "H" (Jackson) is brought in to use "enhanced interrogation techniques" — i.e., torture — to extract the locations. The film was controversial upon release, banned in some countries, and largely given a limited theatrical run before finding a cult audience via home video and, notably, piracy.
