Few films in the history of cinema have garnered a reputation as toxic, notorious, and legally fraught as Srđan Spasojević’s 2010 horror-drama, A Serbian Film . Banned in over a dozen countries, chopped and spliced by censorship boards from Spain to Germany, and often reduced to a digital myth, the film exists in a fractured multiverse of versions. For the curious cinephile, the horror completionist, or the critic studying the limits of screen violence, understanding the differences between the cut and uncut versions of A Serbian Film is essential.

The uncut version contains:

Uncut Version Differences | A Serbian Film

Few films in the history of cinema have garnered a reputation as toxic, notorious, and legally fraught as Srđan Spasojević’s 2010 horror-drama, A Serbian Film . Banned in over a dozen countries, chopped and spliced by censorship boards from Spain to Germany, and often reduced to a digital myth, the film exists in a fractured multiverse of versions. For the curious cinephile, the horror completionist, or the critic studying the limits of screen violence, understanding the differences between the cut and uncut versions of A Serbian Film is essential.

The uncut version contains: