The search term you provided appears to refer to the 2014 psychological horror-thriller film titled "Deadly Virtues: Love. Honour. Obey."
The film is a home-invasion thriller that explores the dynamics of a broken marriage under extreme duress.
At first glance, Deadly Virtues appears to be a standard, albeit gritty, home-invasion thriller. An intruder named Aaron (Edward Akrout) breaks into a suburban home, terrorizes a middle-class couple (Megan Maczko and Matt Barber), and Subjects them to harrowing physical and psychological torture. However, as the weekend progresses, the film shifts from a horror trope into a provocative character study on the nature of domestic power dynamics and the hidden rot within a seemingly normal marriage. Subverting the Vows
In the once-great city of Azura, where the sun dipped into the horizon and painted the sky with hues of crimson and gold, the virtues of love, honour, and obedience were upheld as the highest codes of conduct. The city was home to the prestigious Order of the Red Vow, a group of elite warriors who embodied these virtues.
Introducing: The Deadly Virtues Collection
Of the three, “obey” seems the least controversial – yet it is the most empirically dangerous. Stanley Milgram’s 1963 obedience experiments demonstrated that 65% of ordinary men would administer what they believed to be lethal electric shocks to an innocent person simply because a lab-coated authority told them to. Follow-up studies across cultures replicated the result. Hannah Arendt, covering the trial of Adolf Eichmann, coined “the banality of evil”: Eichmann was not a sadist but a conscientious bureaucrat who “obeyed orders” without moral thought.
On page 201, the promise is sealed. By chapter 16, the first rule is broken.
The search term you provided appears to refer to the 2014 psychological horror-thriller film titled "Deadly Virtues: Love. Honour. Obey."
The film is a home-invasion thriller that explores the dynamics of a broken marriage under extreme duress.
At first glance, Deadly Virtues appears to be a standard, albeit gritty, home-invasion thriller. An intruder named Aaron (Edward Akrout) breaks into a suburban home, terrorizes a middle-class couple (Megan Maczko and Matt Barber), and Subjects them to harrowing physical and psychological torture. However, as the weekend progresses, the film shifts from a horror trope into a provocative character study on the nature of domestic power dynamics and the hidden rot within a seemingly normal marriage. Subverting the Vows
In the once-great city of Azura, where the sun dipped into the horizon and painted the sky with hues of crimson and gold, the virtues of love, honour, and obedience were upheld as the highest codes of conduct. The city was home to the prestigious Order of the Red Vow, a group of elite warriors who embodied these virtues.
Introducing: The Deadly Virtues Collection
Of the three, “obey” seems the least controversial – yet it is the most empirically dangerous. Stanley Milgram’s 1963 obedience experiments demonstrated that 65% of ordinary men would administer what they believed to be lethal electric shocks to an innocent person simply because a lab-coated authority told them to. Follow-up studies across cultures replicated the result. Hannah Arendt, covering the trial of Adolf Eichmann, coined “the banality of evil”: Eichmann was not a sadist but a conscientious bureaucrat who “obeyed orders” without moral thought.
On page 201, the promise is sealed. By chapter 16, the first rule is broken.