Chloroform Does Not Knock Person Out Using Work Like In The Movies




Chloroform isn't the magic knockout potion Hollywood makes it out to be.


It's not some elegant sedative you dab on a lace handkerchief and watch your target gracefully swoon.


It's a crude, unpredictable chemical bludgeon that's more likely to trigger a coughing fit than a peaceful slumber.


In the real world, chloroform is a slow-acting poison.


It takes minutes of forced inhalation to even get close to unconsciousness, not the seconds they show in those clichéd kidnapping scenes.


Imagine trying to smother someone with a wet sock for five minutes while they struggle and gag—not exactly the suave maneuver you'd expect from a mastermind villain.


Even if you somehow manage to restrain your victim and shove a chloroform-soaked rag in their face, the dosage is a crap shoot.


Too little, they'll just get woozy and irritated.



Too much, and you'll be facing manslaughter charges faster than you can say, "Oops, my bad."

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