The Benefactress (An Exposure of Cinematic Freedom), directed by Guerrilla Metropolitana, is an uncompromising piece of underground horror that deliberately blurs the lines between cinema, performance art, and provocation. Running at just over an hour, the film operates less like a conventional narrative and more like a confrontational experiment that challenges the viewer’s tolerance and expectations of what a film can be.
The premise is deceptively simple. A controversial filmmaker is funded by a mysterious overseas patron; an unseen benefactor (played by Elektra McBride, who also funded The Benefactress) who insists on observing and influencing the production remotely. What unfolds is not just a film within a film, but a disturbing examination of power, voyeurism, and the darker side of artistic freedom. The project quickly descends into a claustrophobic scenario in which the filmmaker and performers push moral and creative boundaries in pursuit of raw ‘art’.
One of the film’s most striking qualities is its stark aesthetic. Shot with a raw, minimalist style combining grainy black and white with scratchy Super 8, and set largely in a single location, the film creates an atmosphere that feels documentary-like. The lack of polish enhances the sense that the audience is witnessing something illicit or forbidden rather than a carefully staged production. This voyeuristic tone is reinforced by the film’s meta-cinematic structure, with Gasper Noe-type flash cards between scenes, which constantly remind viewers that they are watching both a film and the making of one.
The performances, particularly from Juicy X and McBride, contribute to the unsettling tone. Their roles feel less like traditional characters and more like participants in a very bleak experiment. This approach may intrigue viewers interested in experimental cinema, though it also contributes to the film’s divisive reception. Some people will turn off quickly, and those who stay will find the experience a gruelling one.
Yes, The Benefactress is far from an easy watch. Its graphic themes and confrontational imagery have sparked considerable controversy and led many cinemas to refuse screening it. For some, the film’s extreme content overshadows any artistic intentions. For others, that very extremity is the point – forcing audiences to question the relationship between art, exploitation, and the viewer’s complicity.
But then, The Benefactress is not designed to entertain in the traditional sense. Instead, it functions as a provocative statement about cinematic freedom and the limits of artistic expression. Whether one views it as daring experimental art or excessive shock cinema will depend largely on personal tolerance and interpretation. Either way, it is a film that refuses to be ignored.

THE BENEFACTRESS is available now to stream on Fawesome.


