Is this interactive movie seriously tries to say that...
... if two young girls albeit with an arrogant ruthless attitude manage to rape a guy, in this case the titular clown character of "Chuckle", and he goes berserk after them with a chainsaw in the name of vengeance for the horrible deed, then we are STILL meant to be on THEIR side and try to rescue them from a vengeful man implying that this is very much the right thing to do (to rescue them), even if they do it in a particularly humiliating and even physically painful way of shoving a glass bottle (ouch) up his behind? (!)
(By the way, and I don't mean to sound too controversial or God forbid unintentionally offensive, but to those of you who have seen/played this interactive movie video game that is "Chuckle's Revenge" (2010), before the poor dude goes all Leatherface (The Texas Chainsaw Massacre (1974) - and RIP Tobe Hooper who recently died AT the age of 74) on them, during the actual assault/incident, how exactly DO the two young ladies manage to OVERPOWER HIM, given that he probably IS a big strong man etc, and even if he DIDN'T want to fight back as his consciousness, conscience and good spirit don't allow him to hit a woman even in self defense, he could maybe push them back and run away etc, and violate him? Did they have associates? Drugs? Drugged drinks? Was he surprisingly hit and then knocked out? Did they have a gun on him or something? Emotional blackmail? Were they just surprisingly PHYSICALLY strong ala Uma Thurman from "Kill Bill" both volumes but this time on the BAD side? Or how? Just curious, thanks.)
Or maybe its message is intended to be morally ambiguous, heck, it could even secretly be asking something along the lines of - but what if they, er, sexually assault him in a LESS painful manner, maybe they tied him up and only against his will violated sexually his penis like in Eli Roth's movie "Knock Knock" (2015), which predates it by 5 years, would they deserve a vengeful death THEN, like, for instance, as proven by the innumerable "I Spit on Your Grave"-movies and their ilk, if the guys did it to women or even other men in some cases (heck, whilst it technically genre-wise isn't even IT, Quentin Tarantino's most belovedly acclaimed, universally praised and highly influential movie masterpiece "Pulp Fiction" (1994) had Marcellus Wallace exacting violent revenge against a man who raped him, so in a way that segment was a male on male rape and revenge part, brief as it was in the overall picture though)? (Maybe just maybe, some of those other such case scenarios where men are victims of women are just in general not as traumatic to go all the way, wrong as they are, even if they're still for more reasons than one undesireable either.)
But back to this interactive movie (video game?) that is "Chuckle's Revenge" (2010). What is it REALLY trying to say? Also, is it any GOOD? Thanks.
P.S. I haven't explored this NOR seen that movie yet either, but plot-wise at least, this interactive movie would make for an interesting double bill with Matthew Saliba's ultra rare and incredibly obscure little seen slice of reversal revenge short film "She Was Asking For It" (2007).