Vaz Andreas appears in Hillside Cannibals (2006), a film that embodies the raw, unfiltered essence of grindhouse cinema. His role contributes to the film's exploration of survival and madness in a brutal landscape. While little is documented about his career, his performance in this cult classic aligns him with the tradition of exploitation films that push boundaries and challenge norms. In Hillside Cannibals, Andreas helps to create a visceral experience that resonates with fans of the genre.
Hillside Cannibals
In the year 1606, Sawney Bean (Leigh Scott), a ruthless psychopath, earned a notoriety as the world's most brutal serial killer, predating Jack the Ripper and Bloody Bill by several hundred years. In life, Sawney was a cannibal, who captured his victims and literally butchered them, feasting on their corpses afterwards. His practices are continued in the modern day by his in-bred descendants, who dwell in vast caves in the Mojave Desert and feed on the flesh of passers-by, as a group of teenagers soon discover whilst exploring the steep cliff-face where Sawney's descendants dwell in search of flesh.