A man's corpse is found with its eyes gouged out. Very bloody, but notably fake-looking.
A woman is stabbed in the spine with a knife. Blood is seen pouring out as she tries to crawl away. Her body is discovered drenched in blood later.
A woman accidentally pulls down a curtain that is engulfed in flames onto herself. She screams and flails around, before falling out of a window and through a glass roof. Her body is seen later, but it's hard to see any details.
A man Is choked by a cord and struggles (not graphic)
Like all Dario Argento films, the blood is stylized. It is hyper saturated in color and splatters unrealistically.
A woman finds a corpse underwater, it bumps into her several times, it's face and limbs are rotting showing red skeleton/muscles.
A man is stabbed through the neck with a knife, with very bloody results. He gasps for air and clings to another character smearing blood.
A woman is briefly see being hung.
A woman's hand is cut on a broken doorknob. Some blood is shown. She puts a bloody handprint on a curtain.
A woman is guillotined, blood splatters on the walls and the blade is shown stuck halfway in her neck.
In comparison to Dario Argento's other films such as "Tenebre" and "Opera", Inferno, although still very graphic, is slightly less intense and realistic.
A woman is scratched and bitten by several cats all at once, before she is stabbed offscreen.
A man grabs an actual cat by its scruff and slams its head into a chair. Although it is unknown if the cat was actually hurt, it is unlikely since the slam is done in a separate camera shot, and done in a closeup. Additionally, the same live cat is seen in a burlap sack completely unharmed. Later, he throws the sack into a river. This scene may be very upsetting for animal lovers.
A man falls into a river and is almost eaten alive by rats. Then, a man runs over towards him and hacks his neck apart with a knife. A very drawn out and violent scene.