Based on available records and industry databases, there is no widely documented mainstream or adult industry event matching the exact phrase “Bella Bare and Richard Mann — Split Open by Monster C…” in public news or verified talent archives.
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Based on current information, this specific title and character pairing do not appear in mainstream literary databases or broad web search results. However, similar themes and names often appear in: Serialized Web Fiction : Stories on platforms like , where titles like The Exclusive Mistress often feature characters like "Rich" or "Richard." Indie Romance/Drama Bella Bare -- Richard Mann Split Open by Monster C...
: Many independent authors publish "split-up" or "monster" themed romance dramas that are serialized daily on social media or dedicated apps. Could you clarify if this is from a specific app (like Galatea or GoodNovel) or a social media series ? Knowing the platform or author's name
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According to underground film forums, Bella Bare was supposedly shot in 1982 on Super 8 film in rural Florida by a one-time director named Haskell “Hack” Torrence. The plot, reconstructed from an interview Torrence gave to a now-defunct fanzine Splat! in 1985, went like this:
Bella Bare (real name: unknown) is a late-night radio host who specializes in call-in ghost stories. Richard Mann is her skeptical producer. One night, a caller describes a “Monster C...” – the caller is cut off mid-sentence by static. Investigating the source of the call, Richard travels to an abandoned alligator farm. Inside, he finds not gators, but a bio-engineered creature (referred to in the script as “Clyde”) – a hybrid of crocodile, condor, and corroded machinery. The monster splits Richard open from sternum to pelvis in a single unbroken take. Bella hears his death over the radio. The final shot is her reaching toward the speaker as the monster’s silhouette crosses her window.
The film was screened exactly once – at a drive-in theater in Ocala, Florida, in August 1983. Legend says seven audience members vomited, one had a seizure, and the projectionist destroyed the second reel out of disgust. Only a 45-second trailer survived, featuring the iconic “split open” moment – reportedly achieved with a real pig carcass and a hydraulic claw.
That trailer, if it exists, has never surfaced online.
| Field | Value | |-------|-------| | Format | 24‑bit/96 kHz WAV (master), 16‑bit/44.1 kHz MP3 (320 kbps) | | Cue Points (recommended) | 0:45 (groove start), 2:30 (lead intro), 4:20 (breakdown), 5:30 (drop) | | Key | A‑minor (Open‑Key: 8A) – easy to mix with tracks in C‑major (8B) or D‑minor (9A). | | BPM | 124 (±0.02) – syncable with most house/tech‑house sets. | | Label Catalog | MC‑001 (full version), MC‑001‑R (radio edit). | | ISRC | US‑C2‑24‑00123‑01 (full), US‑C2‑24‑00123‑02 (radio edit). | Based on available records and industry databases, there
Today, no known copy of Bella Bare: Richard Mann Split Open by Monster Crocodile (or whatever the full name was) exists in public or private collections. The Internet Archive holds a single text file: “BB_RM_SOBMC_notes.txt” – a transcription of the Splat! magazine interview. The file is dated 1999 and signed by someone called “ReelSeeker.”
Attempts to locate Haskell Torrence have failed. Florida death records show three H. Torrences – one died in 1991 (possible), one in 2005 (less likely, but possible), and one is alive but denies all involvement. Film registries from the early 80s contain no entry for the title, suggesting it may have been distributed without copyright – a common practice for cash-only drive-in features.
Some collectors on the message board Cinemorgue claim to have seen a 7-second clip in a 2002 mondo documentary called Flesh & Frame: The Ugliest Cuts. That clip allegedly shows a man’s torso – mid-split – with a practical effect of ribs cracking outward. The monster’s claw is visible but indistinct. The clip ends with a woman’s scream. The audio is described as “caked in tape hiss.”
If that clip is real, it is the only visual evidence of the film’s existence.