Compared to the short Un Chien Andalou by Luis Buñuel. It is also worth mentioning that due to this, these films have a rather nightmarish vision and feel surreal, especially The Forbidden, since it has a mixture of negative tape with black and white, which makes it look very strange and sometimes I finish it. Barkers short story, about a man whose hands gain sentience and rebel against him with predictably violent results, serves as one half of the inspiration for this tedious made-for-TV. As they struggle, the last surviving human runner makes it to the finish line and Hell loses once again. Before he can win, Joel engages in a struggle with Hell's runner, who bites off his face. It is because of the editing and the mixed images that these tapes can be somewhat difficult to understand, but the concept explains everything and more than movies themselves, rather they are a visual experience. A satanist politician, Gregory, has made a bargain with Hell on the outcome of the race. Both shorts are silent and filmed in black and white, but the peculiarity of these is the editing, since the story of both is narrated through images, but in such a way that it makes them look like music videos. In fact, I found them to be quite a striking experiment for Clive Barker to decide to start his early days in the cinema and they are no different from other very peculiar short films made by great directors in their early days. As movies themselves I can't say that Salome and The Forbidden are very good, but they are quite rare and curious.
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