
It's about two feminist tribes who have fallen out over whether men should be eaten with guacamole or clam dip.
Cannibal Film Cannibal Women in the Avocado Jungle of Death parodies this trope. And seeing how they're all blackout inbred, they also qualify as a Cannibal Clan. The Troglodytes/cave people in Bone Tomahawk. He then reveals that they are in fact vegetarians and has a good laugh. In Black Panther, M'Baku implies that the Jabari are this to scare Agent Ross. The Bad Batch: the first people Arlen meets in the wasteland are a group of cannibals who cut off and eat the limbs of their victims to keep them alive longer. He kept a ledger of all the ponies who were eaten, and uses it to recover Littlepip's reputation. The townspony who showed Littlepip what was going on says that the town deserved far worse than what it got. Her companions have mixed reactions to this Velvet Remedy for once agrees completely and likens it to cutting out a cancer, Calamity agrees that what they were doing was wrong but considers the slaughter unacceptable, Xenith has done terrible things to survive and so can't blame them, and Steelhooves agrees they needed to die but wished Littlepip could have discussed it with them so that they could operate in a colder and more calculated manner. When Littlepip finally finds out what's going on (especially the part where they fed an unknowing colt his own father), she kills every single one of them. Anyone who doesn't want to participate ends up leaving, but then they usually get caught and killed later. They do let ponies leave unharmed, but in some ways that's actually worse - they've been selling the meat to merchants and had a decent reputation throughout the Wasteland. Fallout: Equestria: The friendly ponies of Arbu are actually cannibals, killing and eating anyone who stays too long without joining the tribe. In contrast to other examples that are rife with Unfortunate Implications, these savages are blonde haired, blue-eyed and pale skinned, as they are related to the Holy Therns (who are also cannibals themselves, but far more civilized and eat only Red Martian flesh). They aren't picky about what they eat, be it wild beasts they hunt, unfortunate travelers who get lost and even their own dead. In Warlord of Mars: Dejah Thoris, the eponymous princess discovers a ruined city inhabited by a tribe of savage White Martians that eats exclusively flesh. Conan defeats them by "slaying" the moon - he releases a cloud of smoke from a special pellet, which completely obscures the night sky.
They're absolutely correct, though their invulnerability may be powered by belief. In the Savage Sword of Conan comics, Conan encountered a cannibal tribe who believe they can become invincible for a short time by "eating the moon", which they accomplish by devouring the flesh of a Human Sacrifice bathed in moonlight.Often used by Condorito, always for humorous purposes, in fact the vast majority of jokes set in Africa involve a cannibal tribe.Barracuda: Having led his crew to his loss, Blackdog ends up on an island populated by cannibals, the Moori, whose sorcerer, Penilla, wants to get hold of the jewel.Alan Ford: in A Jump in the void, the heroes end up in the Amazon and are captured by a tribe of primitives who wants to eat them (having already eaten the villain for lunch), but thankfully they mistook the Team Pet Cyrano for their god and let the heroes go.And ironically, the Cannibal Tribe's attitude towards foreigners makes them a subtrope of Politically Incorrect Villain. Contrast with Cannibal Clan, where the cannibals are just a family, typically from a culture where cannibalism is not acceptable. Supertrope of Captured by Cannibals and the related exploitation film genre, Cannibal Film. Often provide the Angry Natives for a Chased by Angry Natives scene, often followed by a Tribal Carry scene. Monstrous Cannibalism may be practiced within the tribe if they run out of captives, with simply foraging for vegetation or nonhuman animals apparently having never been considered as a source of sustenance. or those might be his bones adorning the chief's throne.
The Missionary may be already there, trying to make them change their ways, or he might be in our hero's party. The stereotypical Cannibal Tribe are Always Chaotic Evil, dress in very little but for the Skeletons in the Coat Closet, and live in wooden huts around a large fire with an enormous cooking pot sitting on top of it (notably this pot will usually be iron, despite the tribe otherwise seeming to be stuck in the stone age). Once upon a time, it was pretty much a given that any dark-skinned, non-Christian native tribes encountered by a European explorer hero would be consumers of human flesh.