Within the deepest subgenres of underground horror, few titles evoke as much immediate infamy as Slaughtered Vomit Dolls . Released in 2006, this Canadian-American surrealist exploitation film is the brainchild of controversial director Lucifer Valentine. It marks the inception of what would become known as the "Vomit Gore Trilogy." Decades after its initial release, the film remains a frequent topic of discussion among extreme cinema collectors, boundary-pushing cinephiles, and censorship advocates alike.
The film's continued notoriety stems from three key factors.
"Vomit gore" is a niche horror subgenre characterized by explicit scenes involving vomit, bodily fluids, and extreme violence.
The phrase "extra quality" in the context of underground cinema typically refers to home media releases or digital archival efforts that attempt to present the film in its highest possible fidelity.
"Slaughtered Vomit Dolls" is a 2006 Canadian-American surrealist exploitation psychological horror film. It was written, directed, produced, and edited by Shawn Fedorchuk, who used the pseudonym . Valentine coined the term "vomit gore" to describe the extreme subgenre of horror his film would define. The film is the first entry in the "Vomit Gore Trilogy", followed by "ReGOREgitated Sacrifice" (2008) and "Slow Torture Puke Chamber" (2010).
