The story follows a Jewish family whose home is broken into and terrorized by violent neo-Nazis.
A group of crystal meth-crazed neo-Nazis invade a Jewish family's home and subject them to beating, rape, torture, incest and murder.
[4] In March 2015 the British Board of Film Classification (BBFC) refused to issue a certificate to the film for a video-on-demand release, stating: It is the Board's carefully considered conclusion that the unremitting manner in which [the film] focuses on physical and sexual abuse, aggravated by racist invective, means that to issue a classification to this work, even if confined to adults, would be inconsistent with the Board's Guidelines, would risk potential harm, and would be unacceptable to broad public opinion.
[1]James Cullen Bressack commented that he was "honoured to know that [his] mind is officially too twisted for the UK.
"[5] Though some[6] reacted positively to the ban, Bressack stated: As a Jewish man, and a victim of anti-Semitic hate, I made a horror film that depicts the very thing that haunts my dreams.