A necrophiliac killer is murdering the prostitutes at Madame Lan's brothel.A necrophiliac killer is murdering the prostitutes at Madame Lan's brothel.A necrophiliac killer is murdering the prostitutes at Madame Lan's brothel.
Siu-Kwan Lau
- Lin Pin
- (as Shao-Chun Liu)
Erik Ka-Kei Chan
- Li Cheng-Yuan
- (as Chia-Chi Chen)
Tat-Wah Tso
- Chief inspector Liu
- (as Ta-Hua Tsao)
Jenny Liang
- Li Hung-Mei
- (as Chen-Ni Liang)
Biu Gam
- Mustache Nine
- (as Piao Chin)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
No pun intended - Shaw Brothers are best known for their martial arts movies - but they did try to reach out and make movies with different themes ... with directors that were trying to do different genres ... and we have one here. Now the movie did not age greatly in quite a few aspects.
One of them being women and how they are treated ... or random quite offensive male character - with sexual preferences that are not consensual ... just saying. On the other hand there are quite a few interesting cases of special effects ... you still get to see "dummys". Better that way than having a stunt person being hurt .... especially considering the impact of the stunt(s) ... again no pun intended. Not a lot of nudity (some disgusting scenes though, so be mindful of that) ... but quite a bit of action ... and a lot of red herrings (plot stuff that messes with the viewer) and may make him see things ... that he/she did not want to see anything.
One of them being women and how they are treated ... or random quite offensive male character - with sexual preferences that are not consensual ... just saying. On the other hand there are quite a few interesting cases of special effects ... you still get to see "dummys". Better that way than having a stunt person being hurt .... especially considering the impact of the stunt(s) ... again no pun intended. Not a lot of nudity (some disgusting scenes though, so be mindful of that) ... but quite a bit of action ... and a lot of red herrings (plot stuff that messes with the viewer) and may make him see things ... that he/she did not want to see anything.
This is a really well done Italian styled horror movie out of Hong Kong. This dark and disturbing thriller is really nicely shot with great set design and full of lots of dark atmosphere. Corpse Mania is the story of a necrophiliac murderer of prostitutes that leaves the defiled corpses of these unfortunate women behind. The remains are vomit inducing with decomposing corpses swarming with insects. This is a especially humorless film with outbursts of bloody splatter violence and gruesome gore.. This is savage stuff but cut with diabolical surgical precision..Corpse Mania is the stuff of nightmares and was masterfully done.
"Corpse Mania" is not as demented as it's reputed to be.I found Kuei Chih-Hung's earlier horror flick "The Killer Snakes" more disturbing and revolting.However there are some gruesome shots of decomposing female corpses eaten by maggots.There are also several intense murder scenes and some atmospheric bits that suggest Mario Bava's influential "Blood and Black Lace".A calm,inconspicuous young man has quite a special taste in women:he likes them dead.The factor of disgust bounces up to new heigths when the director shows us naked corpses of women,covered from head to toe with countless crawling maggots and he has the camera exploring every single body part.There is a necrophiliac killer on the loose wearing a black coat,a black hat,a white scarf and big sunglasses.The killings are gory enough:a stabbing in a car,vicious throat slashing,smashed head and a decapitation.The climax is fairly surprising.8 out of 10.
"Corpse Mania" is a Hong Kong giallo. As such, it features a masked killer, blood like red paint, and stylish photography.
Unfortunately, and typically for HK genre flicks, this one also features a hard-to-follow plot, murky characterisation and too much dialogue. The only times it really got my attention were particularly well photographed moments using light and shadow. At times, it's like a photography book come to life.
The movie is called "Corpse Mania" presumably as a reference to its killer's necrophilia. There is only one scene of this, which is nowhere near as repulsive as it could have been, mostly because the "corpse" in the scene is clearly an actress pretending to be dead.
Also, like apparently all HK horror flicks, this one features an abundance of creepy crawlies. At least in this case they don't spew forth from people's mouths like they did in "Seeding of a Ghost" and "Centipede Demon".
Unfortunately, and typically for HK genre flicks, this one also features a hard-to-follow plot, murky characterisation and too much dialogue. The only times it really got my attention were particularly well photographed moments using light and shadow. At times, it's like a photography book come to life.
The movie is called "Corpse Mania" presumably as a reference to its killer's necrophilia. There is only one scene of this, which is nowhere near as repulsive as it could have been, mostly because the "corpse" in the scene is clearly an actress pretending to be dead.
Also, like apparently all HK horror flicks, this one features an abundance of creepy crawlies. At least in this case they don't spew forth from people's mouths like they did in "Seeding of a Ghost" and "Centipede Demon".
Corpse Mania is one of those titles that makes me immediately think of those insane, bug-infested, gross-out, black magic movies that proliferated in Hong Kong during the early 80s; but although this film does have its fair share of creepy-crawlies, what the movie most closely resembles seems far less likely—a giallo!
Just like those Italian murder mysteries, Corpse Mania features stylish cinematography that makes maximum use of vivid colours and strong lighting, a mysterious killer who keep his face well hidden (in this case wearing a scarf, dark glasses and a hat to disguise himself), red herrings aplenty, several bloody death scenes, and a silly ending in which the killer's true identity is finally revealed (along with the reason why they're making such a mess in the first place). As is common with this kind of fare, not everything makes perfect sense (particularly so with my version, in which the English subtitles were partially obscured), and sometimes the going is tough during the less lurid moments, but the film's creative visuals and a general willingness to offend make it reasonably entertaining nonsense nonetheless.
During the course of his film, director Chih-Hung Kuei presents his viewers with not one, but two scenes of necrophilia (this is where we are treated to some delightful shots of completely naked dead women smothered in writhing maggots), a pretty cool decapitation, several gory knife attacks, and a body falling from a height and going splat on impact with the ground; there is also a well orchestrated moment of tension which sees a woman struggling to raise the alarm as she is gradually pulled beneath her bed, some inexplicably surreal behaviour from the necrophiliac, who rubs a corpse with a big furry glove before eventually getting jiggy with it, and this being a Shaw Brothers production, we even get a smattering of kung fu action.
6.5 out of 10, rounded up to 7 for IMDb.
Just like those Italian murder mysteries, Corpse Mania features stylish cinematography that makes maximum use of vivid colours and strong lighting, a mysterious killer who keep his face well hidden (in this case wearing a scarf, dark glasses and a hat to disguise himself), red herrings aplenty, several bloody death scenes, and a silly ending in which the killer's true identity is finally revealed (along with the reason why they're making such a mess in the first place). As is common with this kind of fare, not everything makes perfect sense (particularly so with my version, in which the English subtitles were partially obscured), and sometimes the going is tough during the less lurid moments, but the film's creative visuals and a general willingness to offend make it reasonably entertaining nonsense nonetheless.
During the course of his film, director Chih-Hung Kuei presents his viewers with not one, but two scenes of necrophilia (this is where we are treated to some delightful shots of completely naked dead women smothered in writhing maggots), a pretty cool decapitation, several gory knife attacks, and a body falling from a height and going splat on impact with the ground; there is also a well orchestrated moment of tension which sees a woman struggling to raise the alarm as she is gradually pulled beneath her bed, some inexplicably surreal behaviour from the necrophiliac, who rubs a corpse with a big furry glove before eventually getting jiggy with it, and this being a Shaw Brothers production, we even get a smattering of kung fu action.
6.5 out of 10, rounded up to 7 for IMDb.
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