Asian Horror

ASIAN HORROR, KAIJU, & EXTREME CINEMA+

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Watch Asian Horror Movies: E-G

Watch Asian horror movies free

Free to watch Asian horror movies

Get ready for a spine-tingling movie marathon with our collection of movies from providers we’ve tracked down from around the web.

Discover a variety of hair-raising classics and hidden gems, all conveniently linked in our pages. Grab your popcorn and prepare for a frightful cinematic journey as we watch Asian horror together!

We don’t host the movies, but we provide convenient access to them from those who do as they become available, all here in one place.

Encounters of the Spooky Kind II

Starring Sammo Hung, Mang Hoi and Lam Ching-Ying. Rare, HTF Cantonese-language movie from the 90s.
Find I and II on eBay.

Evil Brain From Outer Space

More adventures of Super Hero StarMan (aka Super Giant in Japan.)
Find this classic on eBay.

Evil Heart

A film by Hikari Hayakawa

Frankenstein Conquers The World

During World War II the Frankenstein monster’s heart is being delivered to Hiroshima. The scientists are trying to learn the secret of immortality. The bomb is dropped on the city. 15 years later a wild boy is seen roaming the streets – feeding off of any small animal he can find.

Three scientists take the boy to their clinic and research him. The boy continues to grow until he’s too big to be contained at the clinic. The giant breaks free and tries his best to avoid anyone from seeing him. Suddenly human remains are discovered. The authorities believe that the giant is responsible for these horrendous crimes and begin the hunt to track him down and kill him. Is the giant responsible for these killings?
Find this Frankenfilm on eBay.

Gakidama The Demon Within

“Japanese body horror”

GAKIDAMA [DEMON WITHIN] [also known as TASTIEST FLESH] (1986)
Director: Masatoshi Sukita
Starring: Kazuyo Matsui · Kyôzô Nagatsuka · Ichirô Ogura · Yôsuke Saitô
Check for this rare gem on eBay.

Gammera the Invincible

This was the only film in the original Gamera series to be released to American theaters. It was originally presented in America by World Entertainment Corp. and Harris Associates, Inc. who re-named the film Gammera the Invincible. All subsequent entries in the series were released directly to television by American International Productions Television. Gammera the Invincible’s American premiere was in New Orleans on December 15, 1966.

Gammera the Invincible was heavily re-edited from its original Japanese version. Scenes were moved around and some were deleted completely. New footage featuring American actors was spliced in to create a more international feel and to replace scenes shot in the original cut featuring American extras with poor acting. These new scenes featured actors such as Albert Dekker and Brian Donlevy. The film was dubbed by Titan Productions, Inc. It features the voices of Jack Curtis and Peter Fernandez, who are best known as voices on Speed Racer and Ultraman.

The film opens with Gamera’s awakening from the accidental detonation of an atomic bomb as a result of an aerial assault by American fighters on Soviet bombers caught crossing into North American airspace. Gamera wastes no time in causing a rampage of destruction, first destroying a Japanese research ship, then making its way to Japan to wreak havoc.

In an attempt to stop the giant turtle, Gamera is sedated with a freezing agent on a precipice, and powerful explosives are placed at the base. The explosion knocks the monster on its back, and while it seems as though mankind has scored a victory, this is not the case: Gamera reveals its ability to fly. A second strategy, Plan Z, is devised to stop the monster, this time by baiting it into a rocket bound for Mars. The plan is successful and the Earth is safe from Gamera.
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Gamera vs. Barugon

Gamera vs. Barugon (大怪獣決闘 ガメラ対バルゴン Daikaijū Kettō: Gamera Tai Barugon, Giant Monster Duel: Gamera Versus Barugon, released in the U.S. as War of the Monsters) is a 1966 daikaiju eiga (Japanese giant monster film) featuring the giant turtle Gamera produced and distributed by Daiei Motion Picture Company. The film is the second to feature Gamera. It was released in the United States by AIP-TV as War of the Monsters, and then later by Sandy Frank as Gamera vs. Barugon.
Get this classic on eBay.

Gappa, the Triphibian Monster

A 1967 Kaiju film. This Japanese film was produced by Nikkatsu Corporation, and was their only foray into the giant monster genre. The foreign sales title for the film was Gappa: The Triphibian Monster, and was dubbed into English (considered the “International Version”). The film was picked up by American International Pictures and released directly to television in the US under their American International Television banner, and retitled Monster from a Prehistoric Planet. This version was one of many films syndicated to broadcasters nationwide by AIP-TV, and became a staple for Horror Hosts on television stations from San Francisco to New York City from the late 1960s through early 1980s.
Find this film on eBay.

Ghostly Vixen

ผีดี-ราศีโด่ Ghostly Vixen (1990) Hong Kong Horror Film
Amy Yip; They call her the Evil Girl and she comes from a different dimension.
original HK title :   TIAN SHI ZHOU JIAN 
You can find this title on eBay.

Ghost Story of Broken Dishes at Bancho Mansion

“Rare movie” from 1957

Giant/Yak Wat Jaeng (Tah Tien)

From the same (infamous) guy that brought you: Hanuman and the Five Riders, The 6 Ultra Brothers vs. The Monster Army, and Jumborg Ace vs. Giant.

Tah Tien (Thai: ท่าเตียน) is a 35mm Thai kaiju film released in 1973 directed by and featuring special effects from Sompote Saengduenchai (a.k.a. Sompote Sands).

Chaba is a magic giant toad in beautiful woman form, she’s the daughter of a Queen of Naga who spawns on the human world. She lived with an old man in the jungle. One day, a young Bangkok man named Narent came to the jungle to study natural science and zoology. He must adventure with many beasts, including primeval creatures and flash floods. Finally, he meets Chaba.

He invited Chaba to visit in Bangkok. With her mischievousness, she made the giant temple guard both meet, feuding and fighting fiercely at the midstream of Chao Phraya River.

Tah Tien is Sompote Saengduenchai’s first film. He had been inspired by his studies of Toho and Tsuburaya Productions of Japan in the early 1960s and the Japanese kaiju films of the era, particularly Daimajin from 1966.

The film’s plot is a combination of two famed tales from traditional Thai folklore, Uttai Tawee, and an urban legend on the origin of the name of Tah Tien (now a pier, market, and tourist attraction in Phra Nakhon District near Grand Palace and Wat Pho). The two giants featured in the film and the urban legend are the temple guards of two Thai Buddhist monasteries or wats on opposite banks of the Chao Phraya River.

Yak Wat Jaeng (the Giant of Wat Jaeng) is depicted as a traditional Thai demon, or Yak is stationed at Wat Arun from the Thonburi side (“Wat Arun” was formerly known as “Wat Jaeng,” hence the name), while Yak Wat Pho (the Giant of Wat Pho), depicted in the film as an armored Chinese warrior (though Yak Wat Pho was traditionally a Thai yak much like Yak Wat Jaeng) and resides at Wat Pho on the Phra Nakhon (Bangkok) side.

The most common version of the legend relates that one day, one of the giants, usually Yak Wat Pho, borrowed money from the other but never got around to resolving the debt. The tension between the two eventually escalated into a major brawl that devastated and flattened the local neighborhood. A mediator eventually stepped in (often cited to be either an angel, a monk, a yogi, the Buddha, or a yak from the royal Wat Phra Kaeo temple) and ordered them to stand down, but the damage had been done.

Owing to the flattened landscape as a result of the fight, the area was rechristened “Tah Tien” (or spelled “Tha Tian”), translating roughly as ‘Flat Port.’ The true origins of the name ‘Tah Tien’ is still debated to this day.

The film’s release met with major success, earning 1.4 million baht from Bangkok cinemas alone almost instantly, eventually winning up to 3 million baht after two weeks of circulation in the countryside. In addition to this, the main theme song of the film Meesak Nakarat became a major hit and remains popular to this day.

For Sompote, the massive success of Tah Tien inspired him to bring Yak Wat Jaeng and Yak Wat Pho back for more roles in his next films, including Jumborg Ace & Giant in 1974 and Magic Lizard in 1985.

Goke: Body Snatcher From Hell

A highjacked airliner loses control when a UFO flies over it. The jet crashes into a remote area. The passengers, one pilot, and an air hostess manage to survive the crash.
Find this film on eBay.

Grudge Cursed Security Man

A film by Katsuji Kanazawa

Guinea Pig 2: Flowers Of Flesh And Blood

Japanese horror film written and directed by Hideshi Hino.
Find all the notorious Guinea Pig films on eBay.