16.06.11
Let me begin by saying that the feeling of a knife is not torture porn, it does not show gore just for the sake of showing gore and someway it is not even a horror movie, or at least not in the traditional sense. Â It is simply a reprimand dark history and a reminder of how cruel humans can be evil. In the words of director "The veil is not for entertainment and this film is not for everyone."
If you do not know, the philosophy of a knife shows in detail the unforgettable story of the good behind the Japanese unit 731 since its inception in 1930 to its demise in 1945, succeeding trials in Khabarovsk, in USSR, many Japanese doctors from Unit 731. The facts are told, and some time ago an unknown evidence is revealed by an eyewitness to these events, former doctor and military translator, Anatoly Protasov.Part documentary and part as the story is shown from the perspective of a young Japanese nurse who witnessed many horrors, and without feathers Japanese officer who is torn between his sincere convictions that he is the greatest for and the deep sympathy he feels for an imprisoned Russian girl. His life force is a living hell as he is obliged to carry out atrocious experiments on other prisoners, using them as Guinea pigs in this repulsive story of the barbarity of humanity.
Source: HorrorMovies.ca