July 2025: extreme, splatter, fetish gore, and action/erotic films among the new TetroVideo releases
This month, Gorehounds is pleased to announce the release of five extreme horror films, namely Jonathan Doe’s Barf Bunny, along with the film collections Symphony of Suffering, Beyond the Living Dead, The Basement Tapes, and the erotic action film Mask the Kekko: Reborn.
The five films will be available in the ultralimited numbered and certified Mediabook edition with personalized Blu-ray, Booklet, 4 cards, and slipcover.
The pre-order is now live on the official TetroVideo and Goredrome websites and will end on August 4, after which date the Mediabooks will no longer be available. T-shirts and magnets dedicated to the films can also be purchased on the official websites.
Barf Bunny

Directed by Jonathan Doe (Carving the Cadaver, The Degenerates) and starring Felicia Fisher, the extreme film Barf Bunny (2021) is a fetish-gore love letter to gross-out and splatter cinema.
It’s a fairy-tale nightmare in which a “bunny” with an insatiable appetite and a love for vomit is left alone in a garden to wreak havoc. That is, until she is caught and punished with unimaginable and disgusting consequences.
In the cast, in addition to Alicia Fisher, there is also the SFX/Makeup artist and director Marcus Koch (Rot, American Guinea Pig: Bloodshock).
Symphony Of Suffering

Symphony of Suffering is a collection of extreme short films and involves some of the most prominent directors of the fetish-gore subgenre, such as Jonathan Doe (Erotic Grotesque Nonsense trilogy), Jack Mulvanerty (Scarlet Piss Princess), White Gardenia (Mutilation Theater), and Blucifer (Putrid Menstrual Slime).
Symphony of Suffering attempts to demonstrate that the intertwining of grief and art is as deeply infused and rooted in human expression as the origin of music itself. Indeed, the film’s soundtrack is one of the “Hurriti Songs” (a hymn in Ugaritic dedicated to the goddess Nikkal), hymns that date from 1400 B.C. and represent the oldest composition of ancient music.
Short films featured in Symphony of Suffering:
– Lost&Found by Jonathan Doe;
– Sakura by Blucifer;
– Thalia and Melponeme by White Gardenia;
– Can Carry No Weight by Jack Mulvanerty.
Beyond The Living Dead

Beyond the Living Dead is a horror anthology film composed of award-winning short films about the living dead from Spain, Italy, France, and Japan. Each segment represents a distinct cultural interpretation of the zombie apocalypse, exploring what lies beyond death and what refuses to stay buried.
Episodes and directors involved in the project:
– Zombie Jesus by Gustavo Aviles (Spain);
– Stop Invasione by Leopoldo Medugno (Italy);
– Rise and Shine by Arnaud Baur (France);
– For What The Doorbell Tolls by Nori Uchida (Japan);
– Fantaterror by Oscar Rip and Nestor Arranz (Spain);
– Durante la Morte by Davide Scovazzo (Italy);
– Matrimonio in collina by Cristiano Stocchi (Italy).
The Basement Tapes

The Basement Tapes is a collection of four “FilmHorror.com” forgotten Italian short films directed and released only on DVD in the 2000s. Each segment guides the viewer on a nightmarish descent into the grotesque, promising a disturbing journey into the darkest recesses of the human mind and visceral nightmares.
Created by Cristiano Stocchi and written by Francesco Cortonesi, The Basement Tapes explores psychological collapse and terror through four disturbing stories: “Fama” by Mario Alves Rebehy; “Vi amo, addio” by Cristiano Stocchi and Francesco Cortonesi; “Parassiti in bianco” by Cristiano Stocchi and Maurizio Gambini; and “Weekend” by Maurizio Gambini.
Mask The Kekko: Reborn

Written by Kiminori Komatsu and directed by Nozomu Kasagi, the erotic action film Mask The Kekko: Reborn is based on the manga created by Gō Nagai (Mazinga Z) in 1974, starring the hero of the same name who always acts naked, wearing only gloves, boots, and a red mask.
The story features Kekko Kamen (Aino Kishi), a scantily clad hero skilled in acrobatic combat, who makes her appearance at the Sparta Institute, a school where students with poor grades undergo frightening torture under the school headmaster’s direction. In outrageous attire, completely naked except for her red mask, boots, and gloves, she attacks the torturing teachers, igniting a revolution of freedom.
More Film Reviews
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Kanto Woman Yakuza (1968) Film Review – A Moody Neo-Noir Masterclass
The Stylist (2020) Film Review: A Stylish Mediation on Loneliness
Scary Tales (1993) Film Review – I Ask You! Are You Not Afraid?
Malignant (2021) Film Review: Expect the Unexpected
Avatar (2011) Movie Review – An Unfortunately Named and Overlooked Japanese Gem
