A beautiful woman who is confined to a wheelchair places her house for sale, but a man who lets himself in has no intention of purchasing her property.
A beautiful woman who is confined to a wheelchair places her house for sale, but a man who lets himself in has no intention of purchasing her property. He takes advantage of her handicap. and his insatiable depraved lust extends to the female friends of the crippled woman. Why? Is there a lesson? Perhaps. It is better to be rude and alive than polite and dead. But that is not the intention of the movie. Rather, it is to provide an experience. Some viewers enjoy watching slasher films for the feelings that are evoked. The category of film is by no means high cinema. 50 SHADES OF SCARLETT is a window into the demented behavior of a sexual predator. Horror fans might consider some of the scenes to be funny - the director DID inject dark humor into the story. This is a fictional depiction of a loathsome person. The acts are not glorified. No. The footage is meant to induce cringing and repulsion. Consider it to be like cinnamon gum - it hurts, but it is still enjoyed. Bill Zebub stylized this story a bit more than usual for the erotic horror so that the movie is not purely visceral. It's the most narrative form of the erotic horror.—Bill Zebub
Pretending to be a buyer, Steve, a wolf in sheep's clothing and ruthless serial rapist, finds the unlocked front door of Lydia, a young wheelchair-user who is selling her house, and enters her house unannounced. From the very beginning, Steve's malevolent intent is obvious, and now, helpless and vulnerable Lydia, and a few more unsuspecting new victims--Scarlett and Vanna, Lydia's best friends who come to her house to check in on her, and Andrea, a born-again Christian who goes door-to-door to preach--are going to suffer. Will they escape from Steve's clutches?—Nick Riganas