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Community reviews

From TMDb members · 1 total
  • Frank Ochieng

    The exotically disturbing character-driven Dutch drama **Meat** (a.k.a. “Vlees”) is certainly not your old-fashioned grandmother’s tenderloin steak of a sexual psychological thriller. Filmmakers Victor Nieuwenhuijs and Maartjee Seyferth (who also is credited as a co-screenwriter…

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Meat

Released
2010-01-30
Rating

40%

Type

Movie

Runtime

1h 25m

ThrillerDrama

AI Analysis

Meat (2010) — AI movie analysis

WatchMind AI

WatchMind AI generated this AI analysis of Meat (2010) — a movie tagged as Thriller and Drama with tense moods and fast-paced pacing.

tense moodfast-paced pacing

Story & themes: A young woman is awakened to a world of cruelty, shadowy passions and sensuality. Our models also surface themes such as identity, conflict, and relationships from synopsis and genre signals.

Watch context: Best suited for general audiences. Expect fast-paced storytelling (~85 min).

Community signal: TMDb members rate Meat 40% (14 votes) — polarizing or niche appeal for this movie.

AI verdict

Use this AI analysis as a quick read on Meat before you watch — trailer, TMDb reviews, and licensed streaming links on this page help you decide.

Preview on this device: 31% match — Matches your tense mood + drama. Sign in to save your profile across devices.

Algorithmic AI analysis from genres, synopsis, pacing heuristics, and TMDb community scores — not a generative chatbot. How WatchMind works.

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Audience & engagement

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TMDb audience score

40%

from 14 TMDb votes

Taste match (this device)

31%match

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Views trend (14 days)

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Synopsis

A young woman is awakened to a world of cruelty, shadowy passions and sensuality.

Quick facts

Type
Movie
Status
Released
Release date
2010-01-30
Runtime
1h 25m
TMDB rating
4.0
TMDB ID
68279

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  • Read TMDb member reviews in the reviews section, and audience tips from other WatchMind visitors in Audience notes.
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Frequently asked questions

Where can I watch Meat (2010)?

Meat is available for discovery on WatchMind. You can find official links to rent, buy, or stream from licensed digital stores like Apple TV and Amazon in our "Where to Watch" section.

Is there an official trailer for Meat?

Yes, you can watch the official trailer for Meat directly on this page. We pull the latest video metadata from TMDb and play it via YouTube integration.

What is Meat about?

A young woman is awakened to a world of cruelty, shadowy passions and sensuality.

Is there an AI analysis for Meat?

Yes. WatchMind publishes an AI analysis on this page — tone, pacing, audience fit, and community scores from TMDb metadata and recommendation models (not a chatbot). Scroll to the AI Analysis section or read the meta description summary.

How long is the movie Meat?

The official runtime for Meat is approximately 85 minutes.

Cast & crew

Names and photos from The Movie Database (TMDb). Follow links on themoviedb.org for full filmographies.

Audience notes

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Community reviews

Written by TMDb members — same catalogue as our movie & TV metadata. API terms

1 on TMDb
  • F
    Frank Ochieng
    View on TMDb

    The exotically disturbing character-driven Dutch drama **Meat** (a.k.a. “Vlees”) is certainly not your old-fashioned grandmother’s tenderloin steak of a sexual psychological thriller. Filmmakers Victor Nieuwenhuijs and Maartjee Seyferth (who also is credited as a co-screenwriter along with consultant scriber Stan Lapinski) literally and figuratively leads the wide-eyed lamb to the slaughter in this twisted, titillating tale of emotional detachment yet thirsty urgency for forceful flesh and bone in this tawdry crime caper from The Netherlands. Convincingly hypnotic, colorfully decadent and unapologetic in its branded rawness, **Meat** is a bizarre and bold commentary on the reckless human carnal compulsion layered underneath mental coldness and despair. Fittingly, Seyferth and Nieuwenhuijs delve into the perverse malaise of sexualized conversion through the damaged mindset of a pot-bellied, middle-aged butcher (Titus Muizelaar) and his curvaceous, willing teenybopper apprentice (Nellie Brenner). Skillfully, the aptly titled **Meat** is a potent and functional metaphor for the lost and wayward souls (both human and the victimized animals as edible sacrifices) that are numb and chopped up to the point of no return. Specifically, the spotlighted human species in Seyferth’s/Nieuwenhuijs’s calculating narrative opt for a convenient–if not hormonal mindlessness–manner in which to conduct their sense of unfeeling, brokenness, and disorientation through ritual flesh-peddling excess. Consequently, Meat is lustfully subversive and rooted in misplaced sensuality where inner spirit and integrity are replaced with provocative urges to pound the available flesh with aimless abandonment. Overall, the protagonists in the oddly compelling Meat are seasoned for the toxic taste of the unfulfilled heart while making the walking wounded almost as comparable to the slabs of dripping bloody animal carcasses laying around in the symbolic venue of grinding lifelessness–the butcher shop. Actually, **Meat** was originally released in 2010 over six years ago. Thankfully, it has resurfaced and will be released through limited outlets. The film’s suggestive content (stark nudity, graphic penetration, coarse language, etc.) is all relative to the nature of the exposition’s unnerving rhythms. This is simply a sordid story about working-class stiffs stuck in a repetitive mode of their stillborn lives. They struggle and settle for the day-to-day operation of the predictable professional/personal existences that warrant loneliness and quieted hopelessness. The perplexed participants in Meat are wired for the hunger of triggered transgressions involving banging bodies–the only acceptable solution for stimulation to heighten the perceived pleasure yet soften the psychological pain within. The premise involves an unnamed butcher (Muizelaar) whose desperate appetite for off-kilter, dark sexual fantasies is too overwhelming for description. In fact, the butcher is so consumed by his preoccupation for X-rated affection that he arranges to “get serviced” in the frozen meat locker room from an on-call hooker during business hours. Hence, the butcher’s need to “beat the meat” takes on a whole new meaning at the workplace. Just ask his cute shop assistant Roxy (Brenner, “Crepuscule”). In fact, Roxy had witnessed her womanizing mentor in hormonal action with his female visitor by video recording their steamy sexual session among the frozen hanging meat. It turns out that Roxy has the tendency to capture all that is focused upon her video recording lens. When the butcher is not busy screwing random shirts on the side he is determined to coax the young blonde-haired Roxy into his world of seedy-minded sexual encounters. The butcher systematically breaks down Roxy with explicit-sounding whispers and intrusive bodily touches of how he could make her experience the ecstasy of a lifetime reserved solely for her benefit. It turns out that the tempted tart Roxy is game for the butcher’s lewd love-making techniques after all. Suddenly, the boisterous butcher and Roxy get down and dirty thus scoring another carnal conquest for the meaty mastermind. However, things turn up ugly when the butcher ends up dead. The question remains: who caused the death of this loin-preparing Lothario? Soon, the very frumpy and weary Police Inspector Mann (also played by Muizelaar) is assigned to the case of the slain butcher. Inspector Mann bears a striking resemblance to the late roguish meat man. We witness the cop’s own kind of distant, stand-offish demeanor especially toward his wife Sonia (Elvira Out) who pleads with her husband not to dump her. Inspector Mann, ever so blunt and blistering, tells Sonia that she means nothing to him anymore both at a local restaurant then in the bedroom where he rebuffs her affectionate attention. Of course we see where Mann gets his stinging indifference and insensitivity from when he is seen with his wheelchair-bound mother (Kitty Courbois) reminding her son what a failure he is just like his late father. Clearly, no one will mistake Mann’s critical Mommy Dearest for Mother of the Year anytime soon. As Mann investigates his dead doppelganger’s demise he soon will come across paths with the butcher’s pretty plaything Roxy and soon gains inside into her complicated backstory involving her lusty dalliances with the butcher, her caustic drunken sexual encounters with a couple of opportunistic party-goers, her affiliation with animal activists and her weird hair-raising bedroom practices with unbalanced Turkish boyfriend Mo (Gurkan Kucuksanturk). As did the deceased butcher, Mann starts to become sexually intrigued and mystified by the youngish sexpot Roxy where she fills his mind with visions of lingering naughty, forbidden thoughts. Story-wise, **Meat** more than embraces its obligation to parlay its stark character study into a grainy showcase of blue-collar shock value featuring everyday folks targeting whatever ready-made disillusionment worth highlighting in blind salaciousness. Notably, Muizelaar is absolutely winning in his dual roles as the aging and aroused bad boy butcher and the shady law enforcer with questionable motives. Both men are haggard and bogged down by stagnation and frustration. Muizelaar is able to incorporate some hearty ambivalence about the way the audience feels about these seemingly disheveled older men that feel trapped by the passage of time and insecurity. The fact that the matured butcher cannot relate to a real sensible woman beyond the flesh-craving frivolity for beleaguered bimbos is indeed incredibly sad yet absorbingly telling. As for Inspector Mann the fact that he has callously resigned to loving and caring for his needy suicidal wife in search of his escape route to selfish seclusion tells another tortured tale sold so effectively by the committed Muizelaar. Plus, Benner’s Roxy is a vulnerable vixen laced with a tantalizing mix of devilish playfulness and exploitative curiosity. The thought of Benner’s vibrant loose lass creating an infectious obsession for Muizelaar’s two unctuous oldsters looking to fill an empty sexual void all adds up to the surreal cynicism embedded in Seyferth’s/Nieuwenhuijs’s collaborative psychological sexual suspense caper. Sure, there are elements of confusion to be found in **Meat** but the risque performances, the frank examination of sexual release as a sociological and psychological necessity for falsified liberation and expression and the butcher shop as the creative placement and interpretation for discarded body parts ripped to assorted pieces sexually and otherwise brilliantly culminates in a flexible and feisty film noir that resonates with acidic truthfulness in chronicled alienation.

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