Images emerge from the remake of H.G. Lewis’s Blood Feast

Last Updated on August 2, 2021

Having wrapped production last fall, writer/director Marcel Walz's remake of H.G. Lewis's 1963 splatter classic BLOOD FEAST is now deep into the post-production process. While there has been no word on release plans for the remake, we do have a new batch of pictures from it to share. A batch that is slightly NSFW because, yes, there is some nipple.

Walz's version of BLOOD FEAST has the following synopsis: 

Fuad Ramses and his family have moved from the United States to France, where they run an American diner. Since business is not going too well, Fuad also works night shifts in a museum of ancient Egyptian culture. During these long lonely nights, he is repeatedly drawn to a statue representing the seductive ancient goddess ISHTAR. He becomes more and more allured by the goddess as she speaks to him in visions. Eventually he succumbs to her deadly charms. After this pivotal night, Fuad begins a new life, in which murder and cannibalism become his daily bread. He starts to prepare a ritual FEAST to honor his new mistress, a lavish affair dripping with BLOOD, organs, and intestines of human victims. As butchered bodies are heaped upon the Altar of Ishtar, Fuad slowly slips further into madness, until he is no more than the goddess’s puppet, who also thirsts for the blood of Fuad’s wife and daughter…

The film stars Robert Rusler as Fuad Ramses, Caroline Williams as his wife Louise, Sophie Monk as their daughter Penny, and Sadie Katz as the goddess Ishtar. All of them can be seen in the images below, along with some of Fuad Ramses's victims.

Hopefully we'll be hearing release details soon, but in the meantime enjoy the pictures: 

Source: B-D, Facebook

About the Author

Cody is a news editor and film critic, focused on the horror arm of JoBlo.com, and writes scripts for videos that are released through the JoBlo Originals and JoBlo Horror Originals YouTube channels. In his spare time, he's a globe-trotting digital nomad, runs a personal blog called Life Between Frames, and writes novels and screenplays.