Deadly Virtues- Love.honour.obey. -2014- 720p B...: Fixed

The technical file tag points directly to high-definition digital rips of the controversial 2014 Anglo-Dutch psychological thriller Deadly Virtues: Love. Honour. Obey. . Directed by cult filmmaker Ate de Jong ( Drop Dead Fred ) and written by Mark Rogers, this intense, single-location film blends the home-invasion genre with themes of psychological warfare, domestic abuse, and the Japanese fetish art of Kinbaku (bondage). 🎬 Film Overview & Production Background Director: Ate de Jong Writer: Mark Rogers Release Date: April 11, 2014 (Imagine Film Festival) Runtime: 87 minutes

Deadly Virtues: Love. Honour. Obey. is not a date movie. It is not a popcorn flick. It is a brutal, slow-burn dissection of the lies we tell to stay together. For fans of uncomfortable European cinema (think Michael Haneke’s The Piano Teacher meets Pascal Laugier’s Martyrs ), this is a hidden gem. Deadly Virtues- Love.Honour.Obey. -2014- 720p B...

The film kicks off with a terrifyingly standard home invasion: a stranger breaks into the house of a suburban couple, Tom and Alison. He ties Tom up in the bathtub and begins a weekend-long psychological and physical siege on Alison. The technical file tag points directly to high-definition

Rather than simple violence, Aaron's goal is to "play" husband and wife, demanding Alison's obedience while exposing the deep, abusive cracks in her actual marriage. As the weekend progresses, the intruder acts as a twisted catalyst, forcing Alison to confront her husband's true nature and ultimately leading to a violent form of liberation. Cast and Crew Honour

If you are sensitive to domestic abuse themes or sadistic mind games, skip this film. Even for horror fans, it is more distressing than fun.

The film utilizes muted, sterile tones to emphasize the cold nature of the household. A proper 720p encode preserves these subtle grey and blue gradients without color bleeding.

The technical file tag points directly to high-definition digital rips of the controversial 2014 Anglo-Dutch psychological thriller Deadly Virtues: Love. Honour. Obey. . Directed by cult filmmaker Ate de Jong ( Drop Dead Fred ) and written by Mark Rogers, this intense, single-location film blends the home-invasion genre with themes of psychological warfare, domestic abuse, and the Japanese fetish art of Kinbaku (bondage). 🎬 Film Overview & Production Background Director: Ate de Jong Writer: Mark Rogers Release Date: April 11, 2014 (Imagine Film Festival) Runtime: 87 minutes

Deadly Virtues: Love. Honour. Obey. is not a date movie. It is not a popcorn flick. It is a brutal, slow-burn dissection of the lies we tell to stay together. For fans of uncomfortable European cinema (think Michael Haneke’s The Piano Teacher meets Pascal Laugier’s Martyrs ), this is a hidden gem.

The film kicks off with a terrifyingly standard home invasion: a stranger breaks into the house of a suburban couple, Tom and Alison. He ties Tom up in the bathtub and begins a weekend-long psychological and physical siege on Alison.

Rather than simple violence, Aaron's goal is to "play" husband and wife, demanding Alison's obedience while exposing the deep, abusive cracks in her actual marriage. As the weekend progresses, the intruder acts as a twisted catalyst, forcing Alison to confront her husband's true nature and ultimately leading to a violent form of liberation. Cast and Crew

If you are sensitive to domestic abuse themes or sadistic mind games, skip this film. Even for horror fans, it is more distressing than fun.

The film utilizes muted, sterile tones to emphasize the cold nature of the household. A proper 720p encode preserves these subtle grey and blue gradients without color bleeding.