
I fell in love with a video nasty
Catch, catch the horror train
A freeze frame gonna drive you insane
In the 1980s, newly arisen video distribution companies in Britain got the idea to make a fast buck by distributing cheesy, low-budget and, for the time, rather violent Italian and American horror films of the ilk that would later on inspire Quentin Tarantino and Robert Rodriguez. Unfortunately, at the time there was no law that required videocassettes to be classified before being rented and anyone of any age could legally rent any video; so films such as Cannibal Holocaust and I Spit on Your Grave could be (and were) rented by children as young as 10.
Mary Whitehouse, notorious morality campaigner who had recently gained a powerful ally in the Conservative government of the time, was not pleased.
So in 1984, the Video Recordings Act was passed, which made it illegal to distribute any film that had not been classified. The British Board of Film Classification liased with the Department of Public Prosecutions to build a list of videos that had already led to shopkeepers being convicted for criminal obscenity and hence could not be legally distributed in Britain, to which were added a number of videos that were submitted to the BBFC for classification and rejected. Hence was formed the infamous list of the "Video Nasties". This ultimately comprised 74 films, of which 39 had been successfully prosecuted. Video stores renting them were subject to police raids.
Incidentally, one of the causes of the domination of the early home video market by exploitation films was that the major Hollywood studios took quite a while to begin releasing any of their films for home rental, due to fears about damage to the cinema market. Parallels to later media developments can be drawn by the reader...
As time has gone by and society has become more liberal about horror movies, many films from the list have been resubmitted to the BBFC. In some cases they were passed with no difficulties, but a few of the more extreme cases were passed only with cuts, only for them to resubmitted again a few years later and released completely uncut in the present day (the most notorious and high-profile case of this being The Last House on the Left). Only a handful of films from the list still remain banned, but usually because they remain so obscure that nobody has bothered to resubmit them.note If you are able to find and view these films (most used to be incredibly rare and obscure; what were once considered Holy Grails amongst collectors are now widely available in this age of DVD) you will probably be shocked at how tame some of them are compared to today's standards what with films the likes of Saw and Hostel. In many cases, some films would have been tame even by those days' standards; often films were convicted of obscenity based on the covernote or the overly "gory" title alone. Mary Whitehouse herself admitted in an interview
that she never watched any of the films she railed against, instead relying on second-hand information interpreted through her own biases, which itself was likely influenced by the stomach-churning covers and lurid titles. The featuring of the words "Cannibal", "Zombie" or anything associated with Nazis in the film's title almost guaranteed inclusion on the list. Other films though, such as Cannibal Holocaust, retain the power to shock and horrify.
It really doesn't take a genius to know what the result of Mary's hissy-fits and the bans were; people wanted to see these films. Naughty little boys, spurred by the media's allegations that these were reprehensible, disgusting, Gorntastic shlockfests that were corrupting the youth and which had been banned for the good of the nation, flocked to video stores in hopes of getting their grubby hands on a copy before the police buried them in landfills. Their infamy instead took on a nearly legendary status; many would have faded into obscurity as generic money-sucking horror drivel and nowadays nobody would know they had ever existed (however, several of them were already wildly successful in their countries of origin and beyond, such as the legendary The Evil Dead and the Dario Argento films included on the list).
You can see how Siskel and Ebert reacted to this trend here
.
The complete official list of "Nasties" is below, these are the Final 39 films that were successfully prosecuted under the Obscene Publications Act. (Bear in mind that some of the more obscure ones have up to a dozen or so alternate titles; the following are the primary titles by which they were known specifically in the United Kingdom in the early 1980s)
- Absurd (1981) (aka: Anthropophagus 2)
- The Anthropophagus Beast
- Axe! (aka: Lisa, Lisa; California Axe Murders)
- The Beast in Heat note
- Blood Feast
- Blood Rites (aka: The Ghastly Ones) note
- Bloody Moon
- The Burning
- Cannibal Apocalypse note
- Cannibal Ferox note
- Cannibal Holocaust note
- The Cannibal Man
- The Devil Hunter
- Don't Go in the Woods (1981)
- The Driller Killer
- Evilspeak
- Exposé (aka: House on Straw Hill ) note
- Faces of Death note
- Fight for Your Life note
- Flesh for Frankenstein (aka: Andy Warhol's Frankenstein)
- Forest Of Fear (aka: Toxic Zombies; Bloodeaters) note
- The House by the Cemetery
- House on the Edge of the Park
- I Spit on Your Grave note
- Island of Death
- The Last House on the Left
- Last Orgy of the Third Reich note
- Love Camp 7 note
- Madhouse (aka: There Was a Little Girl)
- Mardi Gras Massacre
- Night of the Bloody Apes
- Night of the Demon (very definitely not the classic 1957 version by Jacques Tourneur)
- Nightmare in a Damaged Brain (aka: Nightmare)
- Snuff note
- SS Experiment Campnote
- Tenebre
- Twitch of the Death Nerve (aka: A Bay of Blood)
- The Werewolf and the Yeti (aka: Night of the Howling Beast) note
- Zombie Flesh Eaters (aka: Zombi 2)
The following films were not included on the list of 39 to be prosecuted, and some weren't even among the 74 targeted for prosecution, but are sometimes mistakenly thrown in because they were controversial in earlier or later eras. Not all of them were ever actually banned in Britain.
- The Best Little Whorehouse in Texas (seized in a police raid in Manchester because the infamous Chief Constable James Anderton believed it was pornographic. The incident was used as proof an official list was needed because police didn’t know the content of the films they were seizing.)
- The Beyond
- The Boogeyman (1980)
- Cannibal Terror
- Child's Play 3 (subject to a censorious press campaign after it was falsely alleged to have influenced the murderers of James Bulger)
- A Clockwork Orange (predates the "nasty" controversy, withdrawn voluntarily by its director, Stanley Kubrick, due to claims of copycat crimes and threats against him. Technically it was never banned, but instead Kubrick sued British cinemas that screened the film.)
- Contamination
- Dead & Buried
- Death Trap
- Deep River Savages
- Delirium
- The Devil and Max Devlin (reported as one in an attempt to show how clueless the police were about the videos they kept seizing)
- Don't Go in the House
- Don't Go Near the Park!
- Dont Look In The Basement
- The Dorm That Dripped Blood
- Drop Dead Dearest
- The Evil Dead
- The Exorcist (Warner followed the BBFC's advice to not submit the film for a video certificate, mainly due to its then-leader's personal prejudices against the film)
- Frozen Scream
- The Funhouse
- Human Experiments
- Inferno
- Killer Nun
- Late Night Trains
- The Living Dead at Manchester Morgue
- Maniac
- Mikey (unbanned as of 2025, allowed at a 15 rating on DVD/Blu-Ray)
- The Mountain Of The Cannibal God
- Mother's Day
- The New York Ripper (deported back to Italy because James Ferman decided that the Forbidden Fruit potential was so strong, it was Not Worth Killing)
- Nightmare Maker
- Possession
- Revenge Of The Boogeyman
- Scum (original TV version refused broadcast by The BBC after being made for them, subsequent film version subjected to an eventually unsuccessful legal claim that Channel 4 had breached its own taste-and-decency rules by broadcasting it)
- Shogun Assassin (one of two films incorrectly cited as an official Nasty)
- Silent Night, Deadly Night
- The Slayer
- Straw Dogs (never on the "nasty" list, but banned from home release by the BBFC until 2002. It was, however, rereleased in theaters several times in the UK.)
- Terror Eyes
- The Texas Chain Saw Massacre (1974) (banned from home release by the BBFC for many years but never on the official "nasty" list)
- The Toolbox Murders
- Unhinged
- Visiting Hours
- The Witch Who Came from the Sea
- Women Behind Bars
- Xtro (the other film incorrectly cited as an official Nasty; an attempted seizure of the film by local police was derailed when it was pointed out that the film had been released in the cinema with a BBFC certificate)
- Zombie Creeping Flesh
The following are works which mention Video Nasties In-Universe or had other connections to the crusade:
- Censor is a period piece set in 1985 about the mental breakdown of a censor during the moral panic as she deals with trying to cut an eerily familiar film.
- The Doctor Who serial "Vengeance on Varos" was intended as a satire of the Nasty craze. Due to its unusually dark tone (it was originally written with lots of comedy sequences, but they were all cut, and one scene originally Played for Laughs was rewritten to play it straight), relatively explicit sequences of torture and violence, and elements of Gorn, it was accused of being what it claimed to parody. The controversy over the level of violence in the story (and of several other stories from Seasons 21-22, especially "Resurrection of the Daleks", "Attack of the Cybermen", and "The Two Doctors") was among the reasons given for the cancellation of the original Season 23, and contributed to the general decline in popularity of the show in the mid-to-late 80s.
- The trend was referenced in a Radio Rentals commercial featuring actor Matt Frewer in character as Max Headroom, wherein Max at first appears to warn the viewer to beware of video nasties, but then turns out to be talking about malfunctioning VHS tapes. After all, as Max puts it, "what could be nastier than your video going on the blink?"
- The Leo Darke novel Mr Nasty concerns a Serial Killer mimicking murders committed in several of the Nasties.
- Neil Innes' song "My New School" references the trend with the lyrics, "It's got all the charm of a video nasty/I've never been anywhere so ghastly, my new school".
- Spitting Image parodied the trend in a sketch advertising a low-budget, Sickeningly Sweet "video nicie".
- The comic book Video Nasty is set in 1983, and concerns a series of gruesome murders occurring in a rural English town that the media and the authorities are convinced are somehow connected to the Video Nasties. The murderer turns out to be a demon who is emulating the Nasties because it finds the hysteria surrounding them to be hilarious, and it enjoys exacerbating it.
- While it's not strictly speaking about the canonical British list, one episode of Norwegian 80s dramedy Våre Beste År centers around a similar moral panic about violent American movies on video during the same decade. Main character Siri produces a teen talk show which she wants to use as a vehicle for the Moral Guardians, but Hilarity Ensues when she brings some of the tapes home with her for research purposes and her son ends up showing them to the other kids at school for street cred.
- In Werewolf: The Apocalypse, Pentex owns a movie subsidiary, Slaughterhouse Videos, that it infests with evil spirits to infect viewers. Relatively little is said about the movies directly, but what is said always seems to be a reflection of the "worst" horror movies of the era in which the book was written, with the original Book of the Wyrm implying they make Video Nasties, and later books describing movies which span Video Nasties, low budget gore fest slasher films, and "true events" videos of things like hostage situations, mass killings, car crashes, etc.
- The Young Ones:
- In "Nasty," the boys try to watch a video nasty only to be interrupted by a South African driving instructor/vampire really Harry the Bastard who works down the video shop, played by Alexei Sayle. The episode also features the Damned singing the song that provides the title quote on this article. The Nasty in question is the hopefully fictional, and certainly not on the list, Sex with the Headless Corpse of the Virgin Astronaut.
- "Bambi" features Bamber "Bambi" Gascoigne (played by Griff Rhys-Jones) who, in this universe is apparently identical with Bambi the deer. Vyvyan recognizes him from Bambi Goes Crazy-Ape Bonkers With His Power-Drill And Sex, causing Neil to disapprovingly ask if Bambi did a video nasty. Bambi just shrugs and says that he had a hard time finding work after his contract with Disney collapsed.
- In "Shadow Man", Milton Pike, a member of "The Five" (a group of serial killers working for the Big Bad), was previously nicknamed the Video Nasty Killer by the media, owing to his habit of video taping his stalking and murdering of victims and sending the tapes to the police.
