[better] — Bunny.the.killer.thing.2015.unrated.720p.bluray...

Bunny the Killer Thing (2015) is an over-the-top Finnish horror-comedy that thrives on sheer absurdity, graphic gore, and extremely crude humor. Based on a 2011 short film, it follows a group of friends at a cabin who are terrorized by a man-sized, sex-crazed human-rabbit hybrid—a failed medical experiment that uses its oversized genitalia as a weapon. Critical Consensus

Plot Overview and Premise

Bunny the Killer Thing is a 2015 Finnish horror-comedy that pushes the boundaries of the "cabin in the woods" genre. Directed by Joonas Makkonen, the film has gained a reputation as a wildly un-PC exploitation flick featuring a six-foot-tall, sex-crazed rabbit creature. Bunny.The.Killer.Thing.2015.UNRATED.720p.BluRay...

The Creature: Half-Man, Half-Rabbit, All Trouble

Where to Watch:

The film's premise is intentionally ridiculous: a group of Finnish and British friends head to a remote cabin in the woods for a weekend of partying. Their plans are derailed when they are hunted by a human-sized, man-rabbit hybrid creature. This creature is not a typical slasher; it is driven by a singular, hyper-sexualized urge to find "pussy," a word it screams repeatedly throughout the film. The plot follows the standard "cabin in the woods" tropes—isolation, a breakdown of group dynamics, and a sequence of increasingly inventive deaths—but filtered through a lens of relentless, crude parody. Bunny the Killer Thing (2015) is an over-the-top

Anatomy of Transgression: Sex, Violence, and the Phallic Monster

They thought it was a party in the wilderness. They were wrong. Directed by Joonas Makkonen, the film has gained

Rating (as scholarship object):

★★☆☆☆ Rating (as party movie): ★★★★☆ (with the right substances)

While the film itself remains a niche oddity — not for everyone, but beloved by those who crave the outrageous — the UNRATED 720p version preserves the director’s full, grotesque vision. Whether you track it down through legal means or recall it from the torrent era, Bunny the Killer Thing stands as a bizarre testament to the idea that sometimes, the killer rabbit really does deserve the extra gore.

Related Articles

Back to top button