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House of 1000 Corpses Poster

House of 1000 Corpses

The most shocking tale of carnage ever seen.
2003 | 89m | English

(98074 votes)

TMDb IMDb

Popularity: 3 (history)

Director: Rob Zombie
Writer: Rob Zombie
Staring:
Details

Two teenage couples traveling across the backwoods of Texas searching for urban legends of serial killers end up as prisoners of a bizarre and sadistic backwater family of serial killers.
Release Date: Apr 11, 2003
Director: Rob Zombie
Writer: Rob Zombie
Genres: Horror
Keywords urban legend, upper class, satanic ritual, halloween, psychopath
Production Companies Spectacle Entertainment Group
Box Office Revenue: $17,949,758
Budget: $7,000,000
Updates Updated: Aug 10, 2025 (Update)
Entered: Apr 13, 2024
Trailers and Extras

International Posters

Full Credits

Name Character
Sid Haig Captain Spaulding
Bill Moseley Otis B. Driftwood
Sheri Moon Zombie Baby Firefly
Karen Black Mother Firefly
Erin Daniels Denise Willis
Chris Hardwick Jerry Goldsmith
Rainn Wilson Bill Hudley
Jennifer Jostyn Mary Knowles
Tom Towles Lieutenant George Wydell
Walton Goggins Deputy Steve Naish
Matthew McGrory Tiny Firefly
Robert Allen Mukes Rufus 'RJ' Firefly Jr.
Dennis Fimple Grandpa Hugo Firefly
Jake McKinnon Rufus 'Earl' Firefly Sr.
Harrison Young Don Willis
Irwin Keyes Ravelli
Michael J. Pollard Stucky
Chad Bannon Killer Karl
William Bassett Sheriff Frank Huston
David Reynolds Richard 'Little Dick' Wick
Joe Dobbs III Gerry Ober
Judith Drake Skunk Ape Wife
Gregg Gibbs Dr. Wolfenstein
Ken Johnson Skunk Ape Husband
Irvin Mosley Jr. Lewis Dover
Tom Towles George Wydell
Walter Phelan Dr. Satan
Rob Zombie Dr. Wolfenstein's assistant (uncredited)
Name Job
Scott Humphrey Original Music Composer
Alex Poppas Director of Photography
Kathryn Himoff Editor
Tony Hill Set Medic
Justin Ditter Wigmaker
Suzanne Hanover Still Photographer
Maria Baker Set Designer
Oscar Alvarado Carpenter
Richard C. Miller First Assistant Camera
Buck Robinson Sound Mixer
Gregg Gibbs Production Design
Benjamin L. Cook Sound Effects Editor
Laura Lee Connery Utility Stunts
Dennis Fimple In Memory Of
Rick Avery Stunts
Wayne Toth Makeup Artist, Special Effects Makeup Artist
Alisa Hensley Stunts
Tom Richmond Director of Photography
Richard Katzenson Chef
Chris Santini Construction Coordinator
Amanda Friedland Costume Design
Sean K. Lambert Editor
Robert K. Lambert Editor
David Blitstein Special Effects Coordinator
Allan Yamauchi Transportation Coordinator
Joe Clarke Best Boy Electric
Virginia Landis Albertson Post Production Supervisor
Andy Given Unit Production Manager
Christi K. Work Costume Supervisor
Dominique Blaskovich Scenic Artist
Bennett Andrews Greensman
Dominik Feller Electrician
Patricia Gundlach Key Hair Stylist
Edward Cass Production Office Coordinator
Toby Forlenza Script Supervisor
James P. Lay Supervising Sound Editor
Richard G. Almo Driver
Brian Robinson Boom Operator
Eric Klosterman Location Manager
Matthew Kern Atzenhoffer Set Dresser
Kelly M. Beatty Key Makeup Artist
Ty Arnold Second Assistant Director
Ben Holiday Assistant Sound Editor
Tony Bonaventura Property Master
Brian K. Anderson Swing
Roy Augenstein Special Effects Technician
Mark Bourgeois Assistant Editor
Michael Lyle Foley Artist
Jenni Wieland Assistant Accountant
Russell J. Smith Production Illustrator
Logan Leabo Gaffer
Eric Andresen Painter
Michael Krantz Art Direction
Mustaque M. Ashrafi Makeup Artist
Kathy Andreasen Rigging Gaffer
Lisa K. Sessions Set Decoration
Erin Smith Assistant Art Director
Anthony Aguilar Propmaker
Kathryn Loraine Hibbs Production Accountant
Jeff Silberman Legal Services
Martin Astles Makeup Effects
Ron Hardman Transportation Captain
William Nuzzo Craft Service
Gary J. Perticone Hairstylist
Susan Cahill Sound Editor
George Koran Telecine Colorist
Deborah Wuliger Publicist
Tom Fraser Camera Operator
Michael Albala Lighting Technician
Missy Parker Art Department Coordinator
Marco Black First Assistant Director
Pete Asidilla Grip
Christopher Lucchese Dolly Grip
Greg Sacks Casting Assistant
Nancy Reid Assistant Production Coordinator
Mary Erstad Foley Mixer
Darrin Denlinger Storyboard Artist
Mike Anderson Utility Sound
Cristina Patterson Contact Lens Technician
Robert Schroer Second Second Assistant Director
John Koth Best Boy Grip
Frederick Howard Sound Supervisor
Sean Patrick Crowell Key Grip
Bruce Alan Greene Steadicam Operator
Ellis J. Barbacoff Assistant Property Master
Eddie Avila Camera Loader
Robert Getty Dialogue Editor
Jeff Bock Production Assistant
Jared Abrams Second Assistant Camera
Isabel Ferrer Payroll Accountant
Cesha Ventre Costumer
Adam Tankell Graphic Designer
Chris Bustard Extras Casting
James Flemming Catering
Derek Marcil Sound Re-Recording Mixer
Rob Zombie Screenplay, Original Music Composer, Director
Dean E. Fronk Casting
Donald Paul Pemrick Casting
Gregg Brazzel Stunt Coordinator
Joe Barnett Sound Re-Recording Mixer
Nicole Randall Stunt Double
David Myers Additional Second Assistant Camera
Name Title
Andy Given Executive Producer
Joel Hatch Associate Producer
Andy Gould Producer
Danielle Shilling Lovett Co-Producer
Robert K. Lambert Associate Producer
Guy Oseary Executive Producer
Organization Category Person
Popularity Metrics

Popularity History


Year Month Avg Max Min
2024 4 23 32 16
2024 5 26 39 20
2024 6 22 39 12
2024 7 30 62 16
2024 8 22 47 13
2024 9 18 27 13
2024 10 25 39 14
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2024 12 20 35 16
2025 1 22 32 17
2025 2 16 29 3
2025 3 7 20 1
2025 4 4 8 2
2025 5 3 9 2
2025 6 3 5 2
2025 7 2 3 1
2025 8 3 3 2
2025 9 3 3 3

Trending Position


Year Month High Avg
2025 8 384 384
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2025 7 385 722
Year Month High Avg
2025 5 812 858

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Reviews

Wuchak
6.0

Rob Zombie’s comic book non-horror take on “The Texas Chainsaw Massacre” RELEASED IN 2003 (but shot in 2000) and written/directed by Rob Zombie, "House of 1000 Corpses” is a horror/black comedy about two young couples who inadvertently visit a house of demented serial killers in backwoods Texas. ... A critic summed the movie up as “a ridiculous horror comedy, but with extremely annoying villains.” It was inspired by (or rips off) “The Texas Chainsaw Massacre” (1974) and combines it with the cartoonish horror comedy of “Evil Dead II” (1987) while throwing in a little “The Funhouse” (1981). The entire first act, including the amusing prologue that introduces Captain Spaulding (Sid Haig), is very entertaining, but the over-the-top approach starts to get dull by the middle of the picture with the overdone events at the demented Firefly abode. The last act gets so cartoonish that I thought maybe the main protagonist (Erin Daniels) was experiencing a nightmare. The fantastical elements strip away any vestige of horror that was hardly there in the first two acts, which were too zany to take as serious horror. As such, I can’t see anyone older than 7 finding this movie “disturbing.” Still, the film pulsates with colorful pizazz and characters, not to mention a quality score/soundtrack. Sheri Moon Zombie is effective in her role as Baby Firefly. I liked her voice and didn’t mind her laugh (which many criticize), but she’s a little too thin for my tastes. Daniels works pretty well as the main protagonist. But, considering Zombie’s resources (e.g. the five captive cheerleaders), the flick sorta drops the ball in the female department. The film sat on the shelf so long because Universal feared a NC-17 rating. Lions Gate eventually picked it up, but it was cut & edited in an attempt to achieve an R-rating. The original version was 16 minutes longer. THE MOVIE RUNS 1 hour, 29 minutes and was shot in Southern Cal (Chicken Ranch Backlot, Universal Studios; Palmdale; Santa Clarita; and Saugus). GRADE: B-/C+

Jun 23, 2021
Ruuz
6.0

Heavy throwback elements make up most of _House of 1000 Corpses_' runtime, from an era when Zombie was still finding his footing. It maybe leans too heavily on a nostalgia that I simply don't have, but personally I found this to be one of Zombie's weaker entries. Great song! But I don't totally love ... the movie. I like it. I wish that some of the parts I found more interesting, like Doctor Satan, got a bit more play, and both the acting and video quality often leave something to be desired, but still, I like it. _Final rating:★★★ - I liked it. Would personally recommend you give it a go._

Jun 23, 2021
FilipeManuelNeto
2.0

**Style, blood, guts and hard rock, without any decent script to back it up.** Rob Zombie has devoted his life to music and horror movies, but so far I haven't seen a single movie of his that's really worthwhile. The director's style is that very low-budget and low-quality horror that made school ... in the 70s and 80s. In truth, I must say that there is some coherence here, if we consider the musical style of Zombie's projects. However, it is a film that disgusts us, and that causes more strangeness and repudiation than fear. In this film, we follow four teenagers who accidentally stumble into a village of abnormal people and end up intrigued by a local legend about a mad doctor who cut people up, was executed and disappeared, leaving in doubt whether he had really died. Of course, they end up in an even crazier, morbid and dysfunctional house of people, who are behind an endless series of crimes. By my standards, this movie is so bad that it doesn't even work as a comedy. There is not a scary moment, based on a strangely bizarre script, without content. The film shows the influences of slash horror, with lots of gore, blood running everywhere and bodies torn to pieces. Cannibalism, necrophilia, sadism, if we think of depravity this film will probably have some scene associated with what we think. That, on the one hand, has a vantage point: the film is gritty enough to pull it off, in an era when horror movies are so bland that even underage kids can see them. The cast brings together a series of actors who have become famous precisely in slash cinema: Sid Haig, Bill Moseley, Karen Black, Tom Towles, Dennis Fimple. Each one of them did their job well, they are the right actors for this type of material, they are perfectly comfortable doing this. However, Haig and Moseley are particularly effective and work very well, stealing the audience's attention whenever they appear. Sheri Moon, an actress who has a certain relevance in the film, is however an amateur, Rob Zombie's girlfriend, who entered the film at his request. Love has these things, it makes us do crazy things. Unfortunately, and as it is routine in these films, the teenage victims of the carnage are simply talking meat that we can't care less about for a minute. The film does some pretty competent visual effects work, with gallons of fake blood and other effects designed to make the killing realistic and "fun" enough. The sets and costumes were also very well thought out and create a decadent environment, in which rurality is distorted and transformed into the perfect environment for a Halloween massacre. That is, the film has style, it has an extremely worked and complex look, but that's about it. It does not present us with content, substance that makes the film worthwhile.

Mar 14, 2023