A legitimate cult icon, Herschell Gordon Lewis was a pioneer of the cult horror genre, taking violence and gore to an extreme that cinema (at least Hollywood) had never seen. His "Blood Trilogy" is comprised of three of his famed underground films: "Blood Feast," about a serial killer who is targeting women and plans to serve them as meat to his catering clients, "Two Thousand Maniacs," where residents of a southern town kill Yankees as retribution for the Civil War , and "Color Me Blood Red," where an artist finds his paintings sell much better when he's working in blood.
An interview with Herschell Gordon Lewis
An interview with Herschell Gordon Lewis
An interview with Herschell Gordon Lewis
A legitimate cult icon, Herschell Gordon Lewis was a pioneer of the cult horror genre, taking violence and gore to an extreme that cinema (at least Hollywood) had never seen. His "Blood Trilogy" is comprised of three of his famed underground films: "Blood Feast," about a serial killer who is targeting women and plans to serve them as meat to his catering clients, "Two Thousand Maniacs," where residents of a southern town kill Yankees as retribution for the Civil War , and "Color Me Blood Red," where an artist finds his paintings sell much better when he's working in blood.