The film premiered under the title
The Incredible Torture Show in November 1976, and was later acquired by
Troma Entertainment, who re-released it under the title
Blood Sucking Freaks in 1981. The film was screened out of competition at the
1981 Cannes Film Festival.
Censorship Troma executive
Lloyd Kaufman submitted the film to the MPAA for American release in 1981, but the organization refused to grant the film an R-rating in its full-length cut. According to Kaufman, the association approved only 54 minutes of the film. Troma proceeded to release the film in its full cut with the R-rating label, which led the MPAA to
sue Troma for copyright infringement on the grounds of utilizing the unapproved ratings label. The suit was ultimately settled after Troma was mandated to issue a public apology which was published by
The Hollywood Reporter.
Critical response Blood Sucking Freaks received largely negative reviews from critics, and as of 2023, holds a 29% approval rating on the
review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes, based on 7 reviews. It is considered to be one of the most controversial films of all time by
Filmsite.org.
TV Guide panned the film, awarding it 0/4 stars calling the plot "flimsy" and "[an] exercise in total gross-out". Rob Wrigley from
Classic Horror.com stated in his review on the film, "If anything makes it tolerable, it is that it is presented as comedy rather than tragedy. Unfortunately, it falls flat far more than it amuses. One could complain about the misogyny of it all. Or its willingness to offend everyone possible. Or even the vibrant, sardonic performances of the principals. But that is giving the film more credit than it deserves". Wrigley also criticized the film's acting. Scott Weinberg from
eFilmCritic.com panned the film stating in his review, "When people use the term 'bottom of the barrel', they often forget about the UNDERSIDE of the barrel, which is where poorly-made dreck like this belongs. It offers absolutely NOTHING in the way of entertainment, and I think you're a cruel little nutcase if you talk someone else into seeing it," also calling it "The nastiest, filthiest and just about WORST thing you will EVER SEE". The
Encyclopedia of Horror says "the film is deliberately tacky and tongue-in-cheek (but distasteful enough nonetheless), in the spirit of
Herschell Gordon Lewis." The book reports the film was the subject of a campaign by
Women Against Pornography.
Home media Troma Entertainment released the film on
DVD in 1998, and in a special edition
Blu-ray on August 21, 2014. == In popular culture ==