If you're a fan of the gritty, unsettling horror of Cannibal World (2004), you're in for a treat. This article explores 10 movies and shows that deliver the same raw intensity, survival horror, and dark themes that made Cannibal World a cult favorite. Whether you crave more cannibalistic terror or just love extreme cinema, these picks will satisfy your appetite for the macabre.

Delicatessen (1991)
Description: A darkly comedic post-apocalyptic tale where a butcher's tenants resort to cannibalism due to food shortages, blending surreal visuals with grotesque humor.
Fact: The film was the feature debut of Jean-Pierre Jeunet, who later directed 'Amélie.' It won several awards for its unique visual style.


Wrong Turn (2003)
Description: A group of travelers must fight for survival against inbred cannibals in the backwoods of West Virginia, emphasizing primal fear and grotesque violence.
Fact: The film spawned six sequels, making it one of the longest-running horror franchises. The mutants' design was based on real medical conditions.


The Hills Have Eyes (2006)
Description: A remake of the 1977 classic, this film explores themes of family survival against a clan of mutated cannibals in a desolate desert wasteland.
Fact: The movie's mutants were inspired by real-life nuclear testing in the Nevada desert. It was filmed in Morocco to replicate the American Southwest.


The Road (2009)
Description: A bleak post-apocalyptic journey where survival often means confronting the horrors of cannibalism in a world stripped of humanity.
Fact: The film closely follows Cormac McCarthy's Pulitzer Prize-winning novel. Much of the ash-covered landscape was created using coffee grounds.


The Book of Eli (2010)
Description: A dystopian action film where cannibalism is a grim reality for some survivors in a lawless, post-war America.
Fact: The movie was shot with a sepia-toned filter to emphasize its desolate setting. Denzel Washington trained extensively for his sword-fighting scenes.


The Revenant (2015)
Description: A visceral survival epic where the protagonist endures extreme conditions and violence, including encounters with hostile tribes and near-cannibalistic acts.
Fact: Leonardo DiCaprio ate raw bison liver during filming, despite being vegetarian. The movie used only natural light, making shooting schedules extremely tight.


We Are What We Are (2013)
Description: A slow-burn horror film about a family with a dark secret involving ritualistic cannibalism, blending psychological tension with visceral horror.
Fact: The film is a remake of a 2010 Mexican movie of the same name. It was shot in upstate New York during heavy rainfall, adding to its gloomy atmosphere.


The Green Inferno (2013)
Description: This film is a modern homage to the cannibal exploitation films of the 1970s and 1980s, featuring graphic depictions of survival and tribal violence in a remote jungle setting.
Fact: The movie was inspired by real-life events involving indigenous tribes and environmental activists. It was delayed for two years due to financial issues.


Bone Tomahawk (2015)
Description: A brutal Western horror that blends frontier survival with shocking violence, including scenes of cannibalism by a feral tribe.
Fact: The film was shot in just 21 days. It marked the directorial debut of novelist S. Craig Zahler.


The Survivalist (2015)
Description: A tense, minimalist thriller about a man living off the grid in a post-collapse world, where trust is scarce and cannibalism lurks as a constant threat.
Fact: The film was shot in Northern Ireland on a micro-budget. It features almost no dialogue in its first 15 minutes.
