Antropophagus, the kind of movie that makes you question not just your taste in cinema, but also humanity’s survival instincts. Joe D’Amato delivers a 1980 Italian horror flick that could best be described as “gore, islands, and regret,” with the subtlety of a sledgehammer to the face. If you were hoping for nuance, you might as well have booked a cruise to the Bermuda Triangle—at least then you’d have a plausible excuse for disappearing.
From the very first scene, the movie sets its tone: Germans visiting a remote Greek island and immediately getting slaughtered by someone who apparently spent years perfecting the art of walking out of the ocean like a bloody Aquaman. And yes, that’s the level of sophistication we’re dealing with. The narrative is basically a collection of poor decisions strung together: pregnant women getting left alone, tarot readings ignored, and a cast of tourists who clearly skipped survival school. At one point, the characters display more fear of a diary than the actual cannibal stalking them—because nothing says “suspense” like reading someone else’s notes while a psychopath is chewing your unborn child somewhere in the shadows.
George Eastman’s Klaus is less a character and more a conceptual nightmare with bad hygiene. His backstory—shipwreck, accidental spousal homicide, and then casual cannibalism of his own family—is so melodramatic that it reads like someone trying to one-up the most twisted Thanksgiving dinner story ever told. Eastman delivers his lines with the conviction of a man who just realized he’s starring in a horror film that will forever live on as “that scene people talk about at parties to gross each other out.”
The acting in Antropophagus ranges from “passable if you squint” to “how did this person survive childhood?” Tisa Farrow as Julie is valiantly trying to hold it together, which is impressive considering she’s surrounded by people screaming, bleeding, and occasionally wandering around like extras in a slasher-themed lost-and-found catalog. Zora Kerova’s Carol provides hysterics that oscillate between “frightened human” and “woman who just remembered she left the oven on at home.” Everyone else seems to have internalized the motto: “If it’s not gory, is it even Italian horror?”
Visually, the film alternates between amateurish camera angles and genuinely gruesome practical effects. D’Amato isn’t content with a jump scare—he prefers lingering, stomach-churning close-ups of intestines and fetal extraction. Yes, that scene exists, and yes, it’s the kind of cinematic choice that makes you want to bleach your eyeballs while simultaneously applauding the dedication to horror absurdity. The soundtrack, meanwhile, is appropriately ominous, as if it too is screaming, “You shouldn’t be watching this!”
And yet, for all its excesses, Antropophagus has a certain unintentional charm. It’s the kind of movie that could be used in psychological studies on why humans avoid Greek islands with abandoned houses, or in extreme culinary cautionary tales. It’s also the perfect “so bad it’s horrific” cult classic: your friends will hate it, your stomach will hate it, and the ghost of your good judgment will never forgive you.
In short, Antropophagus is a film for masochists, horror aficionados, and anyone curious about how far gore can go before plausibility dies screaming in the corner. It’s not subtle, it’s not elegant, and it’s a brutal reminder that the island vacation you dreamed of as a tourist might involve more stabbing, strangling, and cannibalism than you bargained for. Watching it is like sitting through a masterclass in cinematic bad choices—an experience that leaves you equally horrified and strangely entertained, like realizing your Uber driver is also your dentist.

