Color, 1993, 95 mins. 49 sec.
Directed by Herman Yau
Starring Anthony Wong, Danny Lee, Emily Kwan, Lau Siu-ming, Shing Fui-On
Unearthed Films (Blu-ray & DVD) (US R0 HD/NTSC) / WS (1.78:1) (16:9), Tai Seng (DVD) (US R0 NTSC) / WS (1.78:1)
films in the history of Hong Kong's
outrageous Category III films have enjoyed the international notoriety or acclaim as The Untold Story, a violent and twisted tale based on a real-life Macau murder spree involving cannibalism and mutilation known as the Eight Immortals Restaurant murders. Still harrowing and capable of eliciting shocked gasps today, this wild fusion of true crime, jarring comedy, and button-pushing culinary horror remains a landmark of its kind.
some major taboos most Western directors still wouldn't touch. The actual imagery isn't as explicit as you might think on a shot-by-shot basis, but the cumulative
effect is so depraved and unsettling that it's no wonder this managed to both outrage and impress viewers in equal measure.
glory. Both of the prior commentaries are ported over here, but you also get a spirited, sometimes hilarious, and well-informed audio commentary by
Ultra Violent's Art Ettinger and Cinema Arcana's Bruce Holecheck that touches on the real story and its other (lesser) incarnations, the ins and outs of Category III cinema, connections to Dr. Lamb, and tons more. You also get three significant video extras starting with Calum Waddell's feature-length Category III: The Untold Story of Hong Kong Exploitation Cinema (83m10s) , a massive overview of the topic from the '80s to the present with participants including Wong, Godfrey Ho, Gan Kwok-Leung, Josie Ho, and a host of critics and scholars (like Sean Tierney, Mike Hostench, James Mudge, and, uh, Bey Logan) whizzing through highlights like Dr. Lamb, the films of Amy Yip, Naked Killer, and Raped by Angel, as well as odd ones like Happy Together and the Election films. "Cantonese Carnage" (13m38s) features film expert Rick Baker (not the Oscar-winning makeup artist!) giving his own overview of the Category III phenomenon that would enjoy a short-lived but potent bout of international popularity, including his recollections of wrangling with the censors over some key titles. Finally, a Q&A with director Herman Yau (7m4s) at a film screening covers the differences between Hong Kong and mainland filmmaking and thoughts on his overall career. Two trailers are also included (Hong Kong and U.S) along with bonus ones for Famine, House of Flesh Mannequins, Nightwish, The Song of Solomon, and The Unnamable, while the first pressing of the Blu-ray features a slipcover and an insert with liner notes by Ettinger extrapolating further on the film's place in the Category III canon.