Hey everyone! 👋
I know I’ve been completely silent here for a while — sorry about that!
My brain has been fully loaded with content creation for other social networks, and I got a bit lost in the process. But good news: I’m back and actively working on fresh content right here on Telegram.
Very soon you’ll see a new film dropping, plus lots of other interesting stuff I’ve been preparing.
Thank you so much for your patience and for sticking around! ❤️
Can’t wait to share everything with you. Stay tuned!
— Terroflix
I know I’ve been completely silent here for a while — sorry about that!
My brain has been fully loaded with content creation for other social networks, and I got a bit lost in the process. But good news: I’m back and actively working on fresh content right here on Telegram.
Very soon you’ll see a new film dropping, plus lots of other interesting stuff I’ve been preparing.
Thank you so much for your patience and for sticking around! ❤️
Can’t wait to share everything with you. Stay tuned!
— Terroflix
On this day in 1977, David Cronenberg’s Rabid hit Canadian theaters and changed the face of horror forever.
After a horrific motorcycle crash, Rose (played by adult film star Marilyn Chambers in her mainstream breakthrough) undergoes radical experimental skin grafts. What emerges is something far more disturbing than simple scars: a hidden, phallic stinger under her armpit that drives an insatiable thirst for blood. Every victim she feeds on becomes violently rabid, spreading a fast-moving plague that turns ordinary people into foaming, biting monsters.
Set against the wintry streets and subways of Montreal, Rabid is classic Cronenberg: cold, clinical, and deeply unsettling. It blends sexual body horror, viral outbreak terror, and a raw critique of medical hubris and urban isolation. Released the same year as his earlier Shivers, this film helped establish Cronenberg as the master of “venereal horror” and the New Flesh — themes he would explore for decades.
With its mix of eroticism, gore, and societal collapse, Rabid feels eerily prescient even today. One minute people are normal… the next, they’re rabid.
A true landmark in the horror genre and essential viewing for any Cronenberg fan. Have you seen it? 🩸
After a horrific motorcycle crash, Rose (played by adult film star Marilyn Chambers in her mainstream breakthrough) undergoes radical experimental skin grafts. What emerges is something far more disturbing than simple scars: a hidden, phallic stinger under her armpit that drives an insatiable thirst for blood. Every victim she feeds on becomes violently rabid, spreading a fast-moving plague that turns ordinary people into foaming, biting monsters.
Set against the wintry streets and subways of Montreal, Rabid is classic Cronenberg: cold, clinical, and deeply unsettling. It blends sexual body horror, viral outbreak terror, and a raw critique of medical hubris and urban isolation. Released the same year as his earlier Shivers, this film helped establish Cronenberg as the master of “venereal horror” and the New Flesh — themes he would explore for decades.
With its mix of eroticism, gore, and societal collapse, Rabid feels eerily prescient even today. One minute people are normal… the next, they’re rabid.
A true landmark in the horror genre and essential viewing for any Cronenberg fan. Have you seen it? 🩸