: A dark and gritty crime thriller starring Simon Yam in a standout performance as a taxi driver who commits gruesome murders, based on true events in Hong Kong.

While the rating system was meant to regulate content, it inadvertently created a highly lucrative marketing label. Filmmakers realized that a Category III rating allowed them total creative freedom. Studios began explicitly producing films tailored to shock, terrify, and titillate audiences, leading to a golden age of extreme exploitation cinema that lasted until the late 1990s. Why Hong Kong Cat 3 Films Became Cult Classics

: This claustrophobic thriller dramatizes the crimes of Lam Kor-wan, a real-life taxi driver turned serial killer. It set the visual template for the gritty, rain-slicked true-crime aesthetics of the 1990s. Erotic Fantasies and Period Pieces Sex and Zen (1991) Director : Michael Mak

A massive hit that proved high-production-value "softcore" fantasy could dominate the box office.

- A classic comedy-fantasy film starring Leslie Cheung and Joey Wong, known for its blend of horror and comedy elements.

An ordinary man accidentally triggers a turf war between triad gangs and mercenaries, leading to a relentless downward spiral of violence.

If you are diving into this subculture, these are the titles that defined the era. 1. The "True Crime" Horrors

: Based on the notorious "Rainy Night Butcher" case, Simon Yam stars as a mentally unhinged taxi driver who murders and photographs women.