Finally found it... Brazilian
Trilogia de Terrer 1968 @YouTube Trilogy of Terror Brazilian Horror #60shorror #trilogiadeterror1968 #brazilianhorror

seen from Maldives
seen from Netherlands
seen from China

seen from United States

seen from Türkiye
seen from France
seen from Maldives

seen from T1

seen from Singapore

seen from Singapore

seen from France

seen from T1

seen from France

seen from Singapore
seen from Serbia
seen from Germany

seen from United States
seen from Türkiye

seen from Indonesia
seen from Germany
Finally found it... Brazilian
Trilogia de Terrer 1968 @YouTube Trilogy of Terror Brazilian Horror #60shorror #trilogiadeterror1968 #brazilianhorror
Every time I accepted a job I felt terrorized, like I was about to be sent to jail.
Lisa Taddeo, from Animal
We're all going to die, all of us, what a circus! That alone should make us love each other but it doesn't. We are terrorized and flattened by trivialities, we are eaten up by nothing.
“Janet saw the blackness of death come rushing at her and realized that her mind was beginning to give in to the blackness, the way drowning victims are said to surrender finally to their own overwhelming darkness.”
Flag for the Cimbri, the Germanic tribe that terrorized the Romans from 113-101 BC
from /r/vexillology Top comment: A flag I created for the Cimbri, a tribe of Germanic nomads from modern-day Denmark, who terrorized the Cisalpina region of the (then) Roman Republic from 113-101 BC, only being beaten after a truly brutal and devastating battle against Roman Consul Gaius Marius, during which their king, Boiorix, and almost all of the Cimbri themselves were killed. The survivors scattered across Western Europe, being assimilated into other tribes such as the Atauaci, Eburones, and Tungri. Many people in modern-day Himmerland, a region of Denmark's Jutland peninsula, claim to be descended from the Cimbri who remained in their homeland when the rest migrated Southwards. The actions of the Cimbri had an effect on many who witnessed them in battle, and their seemingly unstoppable march across Cisalpina inspired the term *"Terror Cimbricus" ("Cimbrian Terror")*, which became a common phrase among the citizens of Rome- used in times of crisis and during tribal invasions, even long after the Cimbri had ceased to be a threat. Allegedly, during what was to be the final battle between the Romans and the Cimbri, the women of the tribe killed any of the men who attempted to flee, then their children and themselves to avoid becoming Roman slaves.
Law & Order: Special Victims Unit (TV Series) - 'Terrorized,' S18/EP1 (2016) Robert C. Kirk as Brian O'Malley