Bill Moseley Movies
Many may associate the lean, frequently menacing actor
Bill Moseley with his repeat work for goremeister
Rob Zombie, in whose efforts
House of 1,000 Corpses (2002),
The Devil's Rejects (2005), and
Halloween (2007) he starred, nearly always as a deranged, homicidal lunatic. In truth, seasoned horror aficionados will realize that
Moseley had already attained iconic status long prior to his affiliation with
Zombie -- particularly given his prominent billing as the maniacal cannibal Chop-Top, opposite
Dennis Hopper, in 1986's horror comedy
The Texas Chainsaw Massacre 2. This role (the actor's third) effectively put
Moseley, then in his late twenties, on top; in successive years, he did occasional work in features from other genres, such as the 1992 family comedy
Honey, I Blew Up the Kid and the
Richard Gere-headlined romantic psychodrama
Mr. Jones (1993), but remained most commonly tied to horror. Memorable efforts in this vein included
The Blob (1988),
Silent Night, Deadly Night 3 (1989),
Night of the Living Dead (1990), and
The Convent (2000).
Moseley's affiliation with
Zombie began when the two met at a Haunted City Walk in Los Angeles in 1999 and immediately struck up a rapport. They remained friends, and not only worked on the said three features (with
Rejects, in particular, benefiting enormously from
Moseley's long-haired presence -- his gaunt, weapon-wielding appearance was used as a major selling point for the film), but collaborated on the
Zombie-directed featurette to
Quentin Tarantino and
Robert Rodriguez's
Grindhouse,
Werewolf Women of the S.S. (2007). Also in 2007,
Moseley starred in the horror outing
House, the tale of a bunch of Satanists who keep two couples captive. In addition to his film work,
Moseley's professional activities include performing as a musician in the band Cornbugs. He is not to be confused with the actor
William Moseley, active in Britain at about the same time. ~ Nathan Southern, Rovi