"It's time to witness the many Faces of Death."
Faces of Death, the cult faux documentary that caused a massive stir when it was first released way back in 1978, is being rebooted by Legendary Pictures with the goal of launching a new horror franchise, and a new red band trailer and a poster have now been released.
Cam filmmakers Isa Mazzei and Daniel Goldhaber write and direct, respectively, while Angry Films' Susan Montford and Don Murphy produce.
The original movie followed a pathologist studying the most horrific ways to die, and presented what was purported to be actual footage of people and animals being brutally killed. Most of it was staged, of course (there were some real slaughterhouse and morgue shots), but it fooled a lot of people back in the day, and ended up being banned in several countries - though not 46 as the poster claimed.
It spawned several sequels and is considered one of the very first "video nasties."
The new Faces of Death movie stars Barbie Ferreira (Euphoria) as Margot, a moderator for a YouTube-like platform tasked with filtering out violent content. When she discovers a group of “gorehounds” who seem to be meticulously re-enacting the murders from the original film, she must determine if the videos are staged performance art or if a new wave of snuff-style murders is unfolding in real time.
The official synopsis reads: "Faces of Death follows a female moderator of a YouTube-like website whose job is to weed out offensive and violent content and who herself is recovering from a serious trauma, who stumbles across a group that is re-creating the murders from the original film. But in the story primed for the digital age of online misinformation, the question is: Are the murders real or fake?"
Faces of Death also stars Stranger Things' Dacre Montgomery, with Sarah Voigt (Terrifier 2), Tadasay Young (Five Nights at Freddy's), Josie Totah (Spider-Man: Homecoming), Aaron Holliday (Cocaine Bear), Jermaine Fowler (The Blackening), and pop singer turned actress Charli XCX in supporting roles.
"Faces of Death was one of the first viral video tapes, and we are so lucky to be able to use it as a jumping off point for this exploration of cycles of violence and the way they perpetuate themselves online," Goldhaber previously teased
Faces of Death is rated R for “strong bloody violence and gore, sexual content, nudity, language, and drug use.”
Check out the red band trailer for Faces of Death below... if you dare!