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"Slasher Face" written by Lazario De La Cruz, was a film shot in Mexico, 1969.
The horror movie allegedly contained footage of real murders and was immediately seized by officials after a theatrical screening in a small bordertown in Texas.


"Slasher Face" 2 was a stand-alone sequel attempted in 1983 by a film society in Austin, TX. The film was reportedly produced without a script and funded with laundered money. The city was forced to shut down the production when a cast member committed suicide during the filming of a scene on a historical landmark.

The tragedy was caught on camera.

The footage was confiscated for the ensuing investigation.
Locals claim that a film was still produced with the footage, released on a very small number of copied VHS tapes, and distributed at local horror conventions during the late 80s and early 90s.

None of the copies have surfaced to prove this claim true.
However, photos have circulated and many Texas natives of the area, describe the film identically, for the illegally completed production not to exist.

Witness descriptions of part 2, refer to the film as a B movie that takes place backstage at a Punk Rock show at a music venue in the outskirts of Austin. When a serial killer called Slasher Face, slaughters everyone left inside and collects their faces around his waist, flaying each face with a green obsidian dagger. Many repeat the description of how the killer's face was never shown in the movie and how the few times he was shown, were always from the waist down, exploiting his dagger and sheath made of human flesh and his collection of faces hanging from his waist. More common descriptions say that because of the decision to never reveal the killer and how it was executed, it made up for the low quality production.

A backstage Punk Rock show massacre, while a drugged out band plays through the massacre and continues to play as each band member is murdered, one by one.

The otherwise hilarious horror film, is said to have taken a dark turn when a lead actor throws herself from a moontower during one of the, supposed, unscripted scenes. Most witnesses of this film, all claim they stopped watching after that hauntingly traumatizing scene.

"Slasher Face" 3 is the stand-alone film written and directed by Erasmo Vazquez, a 1st generation Mexican-American and descendant of Lazario De La Cruz, the writer of the original screenplay, Inferus Diaboli, which became the first film, "Slasher Face.” Erasmo won the rights of the franchise but could not retrieve physical copies of the films, as they were documented as "destroyed by natural disaster" while in federal custody.


Shortly after winning the rights to the franchise, Erasmo Vazquez wrote a screenplay, including the never before seen, original killer of Slasher Face lore, and dedicated himself to a passion project of creating a cheesy horror film with an original slasher as tribute to the franchise. He described the case and lore as "bogus allegations" on a radio show in Uvalde, Texas and stated that he just wanted to give a tip of the hat to the new and classic slasher genre in general.


With zero budget, his screenplay eventually lured in the help of very talented artists and musicians. Together they composed the film Slasher Face 3. A tale of a mysterious killer committing murders that match the franchise's underground Mexican urban legend about a demonic being referred to as Inferus Diaboli. A diabolical slayer wielding a green obsidian dagger that collected the faces of its victims in the Mayan and Aztec civilizations.


This mysterious killer is believed to be the demonic face flayer, Inferus Diaboli, which soon became locally known as "Slasher Face" when it began to terrorize the Texas towns along the Mexican border, murdering residents and collecting their faces.


A group of headbangers from a small town trailer park, cluelessly lure the ancient slayer with their demonic music.


Witness the heavy metal party massacre, in this stand-alone third installment to the Slasher Face forsaken franchise:
SLASHER FACE 3.

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Through the Freedom of Information Act, a group of passionate and fanatic filmmakers are finally allowed to reveal the truth behind the franchise and its formerly underground status of being cursed.
Find out more about the first two films in the full documentary,
"The Slasher Face Forsaken Franchise”
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