Todd Sheets doesn’t just make movies; he stages low-budget massacres. While most directors would let a microscopic budget limit their scope, Sheets treats his lack of funds like an invitation to see how much corn syrup and latex he can cram into a single frame. He knows how to make things loud, bloody, and gross, a holy trinity of exploitation that deserves to be etched into the skin of every SOV devotee.
A vicious new street drug called Rapture is flooding New York Cit and Jack (Mark Glover) is the cop on the case. But the Breeders gang isn’t human. No, they’re demons, cooking up something infernal for the streets, as well as giving birth to the Antichrist. But if Jack can get the young girl who has been impregnanted with the demon child baptized — by Pastor Williams, played by Rudy Ray Moore! — the world can be saved. Also: there’s relationship drama, as Jack’s ex-wife isn’t just sleeping with a drug-dealing demon, she won’t let our cop hero see their daughter Amy (Rebecca Rose). And, of course, strip clubs, demonic gangbangers and cowboys, angels fighting demons, maggots inside heads, worms inside bodies, even more gore galore and plenty of riffs. There’s also a demon who Xtro-style emerges from a woman as a full-grown man. There’s also a switchout of heroes at some point, as Steve (Nick Stodden) meets up with Amy to get this case solved.
Kansas City, Missouri isn’t NYC, but you wouldn’t know it. Sheets has a vision here and delivers with big crowds mixing it up with the in-your-face viscera. This has my highest recommendation.

Fistful of the Undead (2014): If Violent New Breed is the main course of glorious filth, Fistful of the Undead is the shot of cheap tequila you take right before the bar fight starts. Included as a standout extra on the Visual Vengeance release, this short is Todd Sheets stripping his style down to its most primal, lizard-brain essentials.
If you’ve ever wondered what would happen if Sergio Leone lost his mind, got on a plane and started filming in a Kansas sCity laughterhouse, this is it. Fistful of the Undead is a micro-budget love letter to the Spaghetti Western, but instead of staring contests and Morricone scores, we get high-velocity splatter and a total disregard for human anatomy, including no small amount of intestines being stretched out as if this were a tug of war or a taffy pull covered with goopy blood.
You should read that as “This is a great short that you totally need to watch.” Not much else happens, but why should it?

This is a new director-approved, remastered SD master version from original tape elements with the plternate original DVD version, an alternate R-rated version as aired on The Movie Channel and an alternate original VHS release version. There are three commentary tracks, interviews, behind the scenes docs, the Q&A from the Nitehawk Cinema showing, news coverage, uncut sequences, a booklet with liner notes by Tony Strauss of Weng’s Chop Magazine, Visual Vengeance trailers, a reversible sleeve featuring original VHS art, a folded mini-poster of original Ghana art by Heavy J, a Ghana poster by legend Heavy J and a birth announcement vintage reproduction. This has 12 hours of extras, so why are you reading this? Buy it now from MVD.