In an attempt to shed its violent image, horror films were very rarely made in Germany after the fall of the
Third Reich. Movies such as
Horrors of Spider Island,
The Blood Demon, and
The Head were filmed and released in the decades following
World War II, but to very little success. In 1987, filmmaker
Jörg Buttgereit wrote and directed
Nekromantik. Two years later, amateur filmmaker
Andreas Schnaas made the movie
Violent Shit for a reported $2000. Released as Germany's first
direct-to-video film, it was a modest hit amongst fans of independent horror. Both films were banned by the
German government, but their popularity influenced other filmmakers such as
Olaf Ittenbach to bring Germany's underground horror film scene further into the media spotlight. Since then, many other filmmakers have emerged from the German underground horror scene, including
Uwe Boll and
Timo Rose. Uwe Boll is notable as the only underground German director who has gone on to a career in big budget cinema. == Legality in Germany ==