September 2025: extreme cinema and fetish-gore among TetroVideo’s new releases
This month, Gorehounds is pleased to announce the distribution of three extreme horror films: Jonathan Doe’s extreme fetish-gore film Defilement of a Porcelain Doll, the brutal gore horror anthology film Snuff Mixtape, and Park Street Diary (2021), the gore/extreme film by Patrick Fortin.
The three films will be released in the ultra-limited numbered and certified Mediabook edition with personalized Blu-ray, booklet, 4 cards, and slipcover. The pre-order will be live on the official TetroVideo and Goredrome websites until September 30, 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.
Defilement of a Porcelain Doll

Directed by Jonathan Doe (Carving The Cadaver) in 2022, Defilement of a Porcelain Doll is inspired by Asian porn/fetish films and is the third installment in the Erotic Grotesque Nonsense series, which includes Barf Bunny and The Degenerates, two extreme films recently distributed by TetroVideo.
The film stars Little Puck, Felicia Fisher (Barf Bunny), and Jessica Murphy and deals with the theme of salirophilia, a sexual fetish or paraphilia that involves deriving erotic pleasure from soiling or disheveling the object of one’s desire, or viewing them in this state.
The story features a deranged artist who abducts girls and uses them as canvases for her sick works. The woman is convinced that, through degradation and violence, she will be able to purify their bodies.
Snuff Mixtape

Produced by Tony Newton (Gorenography), the brutal collection Snuff Mixtape delves into the dark world of snuff culture, presenting a series of disturbing segments that blur the line between fiction and reality, with graphic depictions of blood, psychological and physical torture, portraying the moral decay of humanity.
The directors involved in this project are Tony Newton, Dustin Ferguson, Jason Impey, Gore Filth, Klyve M. Lewis, Wilhelm Müller, Cam Dewald, Chris Dasinger, and Kieran Johnston.
Park Street Diary

The gore/extreme film Park Street Diary (2021) is presented as a visual descent into madness, all captured through the lens of a camera, with the aim of disturbing and upsetting the viewer.
Park Street Diary is directed by Patrick Fortin, the director of several extreme films such as Catcall and Carnival of Gore.
The story features a deranged man who films the atrocities he commits against victims who are tortured, killed, and dismembered.
More Extreme Cinema
The Sergio Blasco Gore Collection is an anthology of four extreme splatter films all created by the Spanish director – Including Burrp (1996), Mas Carnaza (1997), Plano Detalle (2008), and… Flammentod (Pyromaniac) is a 2023 extreme horror film written by Jean Rises and directed by Domiziano Cristopharo. Known as an author/publisher of extreme horror literature, as well as a horror… Cinema certainly has the power to entertain, provoke, and, at times, deeply unsettle its audience. While horror films often rely on cheap jump scares and spooky supernatural threats to achieve… Mas Carnaza is a 1997 Spanish splatter horror short, written and directed by Sergio Blasco. No stranger behind the camera, Sergio is known for also writing and directing the shorts… This Halloween certainly offered up more spooky offerings than usual. Some of the terrible things involve ghastly treats for children, witch hunters looking for victims to torture and burn, and… Visceral: Between the Ropes of Madness (also known as Visceral: Entre las cuerdas de la locura) is a 2012 Chilean extreme horror film written, directed, and starring Felipe Eluti. Previously,…The Sergio Blasco Gore Collection (2024) Film Review – Extreme Spanish Cinema
Flammentod (2023) Film Review – Fire, Fire, Light the Fire
10 Disturbing Films – How Much Can You Handle?
Mas Carnaza (1997) Film Review – Mass Carnage
Three Dead Trick or Treaters (2016) Review – An Elegy for the Mad God of a Chaotic and Nihilistic Universe
Visceral: Between the Ropes of Madness (2012) Film Review – Sanity on the Ropes
