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Bestiality -bestialita- - Peter Skerl 1976 -vhs... — ~upd~

Bestiality -bestialita- - Peter Skerl 1976 -vhs... — ~upd~

The 1970s marked the absolute zenith of European exploitation cinema. Filmmakers pushed the absolute limits of good taste, censorship, and narrative coherence. Standing in the deepest, darkest corners of this movement is a highly controversial film originally titled (also known by its English title, Dog Lay Afternoon ).

The tension between welfare and rights is not academic; it is playing out in courtrooms, grocery aisles, and factory farms right now. We live in an age of stunning contradiction. We spend billions on orthopedic beds for dogs, while 70 billion land animals are raised and slaughtered annually, many in conditions that would trigger felony animal cruelty laws if applied to a family cat. We have developed plant-based burgers that bleed and lab-grown meat that is molecularly identical to flesh, yet we continue to subsidize systems that treat living creatures as protein converters. Bestiality -Bestialita- - Peter Skerl 1976 -Vhs...

After years of being a "lost" film, a DVD version was finally released in 2019 by The 1970s marked the absolute zenith of European

The film features several notable figures from 1970s European cinema: as Jeanine Philippe March as Paul Juliette Mayniel as Yvette Enrico Maria Salerno as Ugo Ilona Staller (credited as "Cicciolina") as Eva Paul Müller as Jeanine's father Peter Skerl - IMDb The tension between welfare and rights is not