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Incest Fleks

The Top 10 Inbred Movies of All Time

The Top 11 Inbred Movies of All Time
10. The Texas Chainsaw Massacre 2 (1986)
2. The Texas Chainsaw Massacre (1974)
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It’s actually pretty amazing just how many horror films focus on inbreeding. You don’t truly realize it until you sit down and try to tally them all. Apparently, there is much horror to be found in the illicit, deranged fruits of incestuous breeding. Well, it’s tough to argue with that one. So without further ado, here are some of the most infamous examples of horror flicks featuring wacked-out inbreds….


This collection of cannibalistic Longhorns has to take the cake as far as the homicidal families of horror go. And although this go-around wasn’t as horrifying as their original appearance, it was a hell of a lot more graphic and gory, and depicted in awful detail just what this opportunistic family was capable of doing to make a buck in tough economic times…

PANCAKES, PANCAKES PANCAKES. Where else can you get America’s favorite hog killing inbreeds? Eli Roth made a pretty bold choice in including not just a redneck family, but an inbred family in his hit Cabin Fever–paying homage to the weird inbred obsession of the `70s and `80s. No matter your opinion of Roth personally, he can make one hell of a film.

God love Rednecks. Now I love a radioactive zombie as much as the next person, but radioactive, redneck, inbred zombies made on a low budget and in the late `80s? That’s just got brilliance in a can written all over it. And by can, I mean bottle of moonshine. Drink up y’all.

Some money-hungry relatives descend on the property of a deceased relative, only to discover a gaggle of homicidal (and most likely inbred) psychos taking up residence inside. One of the early entries in the After Dark Horror-Fest.

Alright, I’m well aware of the crap we’re going to get for including this on the list, but you have to admit the back story with the inbred family is extremely screwy and horrifying. Just pretend that this wasn’t a shoddy attempt to remake a classic and pretend its a film all its own. You’ve got a killer who’s made from her mother and her brother and a brother who kills to protect his daughter sister…and it’s Christmas. Yeah, creepy.

The degenerate, multi-generational inbred Merrye family takes center stage in this chestnut. They’re so messed up that their minds turn to mush as they approach adulthood, and they begin to do unspeakable things that must be covered up by their ever-loyal chauffeur. Proof that the gene pool needs a little chlorine every once in a while.

I’m not going to lie, normally modernized inbred movies don’t really do it for me, but this one creeps me out. Inbreds are scary enough as is, but then you throw in that they’re cannibalistic mountain men and you’ve got nightmares for a week. Let me just ask though, if you saw newspaper clippings reporting these freaks…WHY WOULD YOU GO HIKING?! As far as I’m concerned, you got what you asked for. Just saying.

Although in some ways the recent remake can be said to actually be an improvement, no list of inbred horror flicks would be complete without the Wes Craven original. Mutant hillbillies make life utter hell for a hapless family of would-be vacationers. This late `70s exploitation classic pulls no punches and goes places the remake didn’t have the balls to.

Once again, the unforgettable collection of Leatherface, The Hitchhiker, Grandpa and the Old Man, rear their (extremely) ugly heads here to represent for seriously effed-up backwoods cannibals everywhere. This movie is an unassailable horror classic, and would easily get the number-one spot, if it weren’t for…

Admit it, when you first read what this list was about, the first line that entered your head was “Squeal like a pig!” This movie has literally become synonymous with the dangers of backwoods America. Burt Reynolds, Tom Voight and Ned Beatty are three city slickers utterly terrorized by a gang of sodomizing wackjobs. But seriously, I think Gilbert Gottfried said it best–given the choice of having their way with any of these three guys, why in the hell would they choose Beatty? Just askin’…
For more news and opinions on the world of horror, including a rip on the ignorance of the NY Daily News, and a look at the contestants of the first-ever Miss Horror Blogosphere competition, check out Brian’s daily blog, The Vault of Horror, at thevaultofhorror.net
And for a unique look at the feminine side of fear, including an exclusive glimpse at a hot new zombie short film, and a rundown of the hottest dudes of horror, check out The Vault’s sister blog, Day of the Woman, at dayofwoman.blogspot.com
Editors Note: We removed Nightbreed because it doesn’t meet the criteria of the list.
Despite lacking a cool older relative or friend to show me the ropes, my early exposure to the horror genre was fairly conventional. I started with the big slasher franchises then worked my way through other genre classics before seeking out increasingly obscure titles — a journey that continues to this day. After binging through Halloween, Friday the 13th , and A Nightmare on Elm Street , I soon discovered Sam Raimi’s Evil Dead trilogy.
Well before the remake or Ash vs. Evil Dead , I distinctly recall reading about unofficial Evil Dead installments on web forums to sate my appetite while waiting for the franchise’s long-gestating fourth entry. There’s the La Casa series in Italy, wherein unrelated movies (including House II and House III , but not the original House !) were marketed as Evil Dead sequels, and Japan’s Evil Dead Trap , whose similarities to Raimi’s work begin and end with the title. But the one movie that always eluded me was The Japanese Evil Dead .
The Japanese Evil Dead is not just a descriptor; that’s the title the movie became known as internationally. The movie’s original name, a mouthful though it may be, is equally beguiling: Bloody Muscle Body Builder in Hell . Whatever you want to call it, I needed to track it down. Many years later, Visual Vengeance — Wild Eye Releasing’s recently launched sister label crafting special edition releases for micro-budget genre films — has given the film its first official North American release.
As it turns out, Bloody Muscle Body Builder in Hell didn’t wholly exist when I had first heard about it. Although the project began in 1994, post-production wasn’t fully completed until 2010. It was self-released with a run of 100 burned DVDs in 2012 followed by official Japanese distribution in 2014. Its first international release came from the UK in 2017, and it has finally made its way to the US in 2022.
The arduous odyssey to completion would be challenging for a production of any size, but Bloody Muscle Body Builder in Hell ‘s hurdles were compounded by the fact that it was practically a one-man crew; Shinichi Fukazawa serves as writer, director, producer, editor, special effects artist, and star. Upon learning that his father was planning to demolish his old house in Tokyo, the budding filmmaker opted to utilize the location for his 8mm love letter to the Evil Dead trilogy.
“I love the three movies of the Evil Dead series, and this is definitely a tribute to those,” Fukazawa explains. He cites Dawn of the Dead as the movie that made him a horror fan, but it was seeing Army of Darkness that inspired him to entertain audiences. “The reason I wanted to make this movie was because I wanted to be like Bruce Cambpell’s Ash from The Evil Dead , and I wanted to kick zombies around like him. I happened to be working out then and I was training myself, so I figured I should make use of that too.”
“Tribute” is a generous term; Bloody Muscle Body Builder in Hell apes so much from Evil Dead that it’s virtually an unauthorized remake. It’s not quite a shot-for-shot recreation, but several major beats are replicated (the lead character even gets to say “Groovy!”), and the general style/energy can be directly attributed to Raimi. There’s a certain charm to its commitment, but Fukazawa also filters the Evil Dead demonic possession plot through the lens of a traditional Japanese ghost story.
It opens with a prologue set in early 1970s Tokyo, wherein Fukazawa appears as an analogue for Ash — sporting perfectly quaffed dark hair, clad in a blue button-up shirt, armed with a shovel — and proceeds to defeat his knife-wielding girlfriend and bury her under the floorboards of his house. The set-up and iconography are instantly recognizable to anyone familiar with the Evil Dead franchise but would otherwise play as nonsensical.
30 years later, unemployed bodybuilder Wakabayashi (Fukazawa in a dual role) gets a call from his ex-girlfriend, Mika ( Asako Nosaka ), a writer working on an article on haunted locations. Joined by stoic psychic Mizuguchi ( Masahiro Kai ), they head to the allegedly haunted house that belonged to Shinji’s father. Once they’re inside, the angry presence of a young woman won’t let them leave, and it’s not long before she starts possessing them.
Running an economical 63 minutes, the first two thirds of Bloody Muscle Body Builder in Hell adopt the more straightforward horror tone of The Evil Dead , while the finale goes full-bore into Evil Dead 2 ‘s splatstick territory — including rudimentary optical effects, lo-fi stop-motion animation, and a fight with disembodied appendages that gives credence to the otherwise forgotten “Body Builder” part of the title. Although no one does it quite like Raimi, Fukazawa admirably attempts to emulate his kinetic ingenuity.
What initially appealed to me about The Evil Dead is how Raimi and company’s scrappy, do-it-yourself ethic translates on screen. Beyond being an effective horror movie, it feels like it was made by a group of friends for fun rather than commerce. Bloody Muscle Body Builder in Hell embodies that same spirit, albeit with even more limited means. It may have taken decades to be properly released, but I’m grateful Fukazawa never gave up on it.
Bloody Muscle Body Builder in Hell is currently streaming on Tubi, but if you’re an Evil Dead fan, you’re going to want to possess (pun very much intended) Visual Vengeance’s Blu-ray. The wildly entertaining audio commentary by filmmakers Adam Green ( Hatchet ) and Joe Lynch ( Wrong Turn 2 ) is worth the price alone.
Copyright © 2021 Bloody Disgusting, LLC

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There is always going to be a degree of salacious appeal in an article examining "sexually explicit" movies. Whether it's admitted or not, people are inherently drawn to the rude and lurid, their libidinal impulses triggered by the sight of curving bodies pressing up against one another. It's hardly a surprising reaction, given that sex is one of the primary drives of human nature. While Netflix don't do "porn", it's refreshing that the majority of the films on this list stand on their merits as impressive works of cinema, avoiding sensationalism and offering far more than crude titillation. There aren't an abundance of sexually explicit movies available (in fact, there's very little besides the films listed here) but what there is covers some impressive ground: sexual infidelity, youthful experimentation, sex addiction and even arousal through self-mutilation are all intimately explored. Perhaps it's a sign of how far we've come that such a mainstream platform for online entertainment boasts a number of films which feature unsimulated sex, while at the same time having something more to say about sexuality and the human relationships surrounding it. Here are eight movies on Netflix which explore sexuality in all its explicit glory (while avoiding the glory holes, but we can leave that to It's Always Sunny In Philadelphia...)



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There is always going to be a degree of salacious appeal in an article examining "sexually explicit" movies. Whether it's admitted or not, people are inherently drawn to the rude and lurid, their libidinal impulses triggered by the sight of curving bodies pressing up against one another. It's hardly a surprising reaction, given that sex is one of the primary drives of human nature. While Netflix don't do "porn", it's refreshing that the majority of the films on this list stand on their merits as impressive works of cinema, avoiding sensationalism and offering far more than crude titillation. There aren't an abundance of sexually explicit movies available (in fact, there's very little besides the films listed here) but what there is covers some impressive ground: sexual infidelity, youthful experimentation, sex addiction and even arousal through self-mutilation are all intimately explored. Perhaps it's a sign of how far we've come that such a mainstream platform for online entertainment boasts a number of films which feature unsimulated sex, while at the same time having something more to say about sexuality and the human relationships surrounding it. Here are eight movies on Netflix which explore sexuality in all its explicit glory (while avoiding the glory holes, but we can leave that to It's Always Sunny In Philadelphia...)



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More stories to check out before you go
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