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this post was submitted on 13 Apr 2025
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Here's a list of tons of leftist movies.
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I haven't heard 'in the barrel' used before(other than 'shooting fish in a barrel' as a metaphor for something easy,) but having someone 'over a barrel' means to have someone in a vulnerable position/'at your mercy' where they're unable to resit, google shows yes origin is based on whipping people over a barrel in the navyI see. In the barrel is a phrase that I've personally only really heard in the 1998 video game Half-Life (and its remake Black Mesa), in one of the security guard's lines, however while the phrase is apparently not as fashionable nowadays, it's still notable enough to have its own Wiktionary entry. In the barrel basically means "in an unpleasant or dangerous situation", so it can have some overlap with over a barrel in terms of meaning. That's why I thought you might've confused these two phrases.
The origin of 'in the barrel', courtesy of Urban Dictionary (NSFW)
A sailor on a Navy ship had been out to sea for weeks, and was beginning to go through sex withdrawals. Fed up with the lack of sex, he asked one of his shipmates what he did when the pressure was too much to take. "Well, there's a barrel with a hole in it near the mop storage. When it gets to be too much for us, we use that." So the sailor went over to the barrel and decided to give it a go. Finding it was better than he'd expected, he began using it regularly, and his problems seemed to vanish. After a couple of weeks, his commanding officer began to take notice, and said, "You seem to be a lot more relaxed. What's your secret?" The sailor, embarrassed to give a straight answer, simply said he'd been getting better rest. "Well good, sailor. You're going to need it," replied the officer. "Today's your turn in the barrel."