Mad Foxes (Spanish: Los Violadores, lit. 'The Violators') is a 1981 exploitation film directed by Paul Grau and produced by Erwin C. Dietrich.[1][2] It was a Spanish and Swiss co-production, filmed in Barcelona.
Mad Foxes | |
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![]() Original Spanish VHS release cover | |
Directed by | Paul Grau |
Written by |
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Produced by | Erwin C. Dietrich |
Starring |
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Cinematography | Kurt Aeschbacher Hans-Toni Aschwanden |
Edited by | Peter Baumgartner |
Music by | Walter Baumgartner |
Production companies | Reflection Film Balcázar Producciones Cinematográficas |
Release dates | 14 August 1981 (Spain) 20 May 1982 (Switzerland) |
Countries | Spain Switzerland |
Languages | English Spanish |
A wealthy playboy seeks violent revenge on the neo-Nazi biker gang that murders his family.
Critics have called Mad Foxes "the ultimate exploitation movie"[3] and "one of the nuttiest films ever."[4] Australian film critic and editor of Senses of Cinema Alexandra Heller-Nicholas in her book Rape-Revenge Films: A Critical Study (2011) called the film a "brazenly incoherent mélange of kung fu, softcore porn, Nazi fetishism and bike film pegged loosely to a rape-revenge structure, albeit one caught in a garbled narrative loop".[5]
Mad Foxes was featured on an episode Red Letter Media's "Best of the Worst" film review series, where the hosts strongly criticized it for its incoherent plot and copious sexual content, including a scene in which two characters appear to have sex in a urine-filled bathtub.[6]
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