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Showing posts with label Sleaze. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sleaze. Show all posts

Wednesday, May 4, 2022

VAMPIRE ECSTASY/ SIN YOU SINNERS -- Blu-ray Review by Porfle



  Originally posted on 10/13/2016

 

"VAMPIRE ECSTASY"

Joe Sarno was one of those exploitation directors who was talented enough so that his films often transcended their rather sordid genres.  With VAMPIRE ECSTASY (aka "The Devil's Plaything, 1973), he made a Gothic horror film whose graphic eroticism perversely enhances its genuine mood and atmosphere.

Sarno's producer, Chris D. Nebe, had access to a castle in Germany which serves as an ideal location for both exteriors and interiors and increases the film's production values immeasurably. 

The cinematography takes excellent advantage of these locations.  Some shots, in fact, are suitable for framing, as when three primly-dressed women in black silhouette await a carriage's arrival at the gates of the castle early on.


Some visuals have a surreal, dreamlike quality, others a formal composition that's subtle but effective.  Rembrandt lighting against stark shadowy backgrounds results in a number of striking close-ups.

The story begins similarly to DRACULA, with a group of strangers arriving at the castle only to find it and its inhabitants strangely disturbing.  In this case, a trio of young women have come for the reading of a will left by the castle's mysterious Baroness. 

Greeting them in stern fashion is the head housekeeper, Frau Wanda (Nadia Henkowa), a severe woman whose sly smile hides sinister secrets.  We already know a few of them from the witchy pre-titles sequence, in which she and the other four women of her staff cavort naked in the castle's dungeon and engage in mutual, shall we say, "ecstasy."


Also arriving at the castle are two stranded motorists, brother and sister Julia and Peter Malenkow (Anke Syring, Nico Wolf).  Julia is a doctor studying the local mountain-folk superstitions, and will later become the film's Van Helsing equivalent when her knowledge of vampirism and the will to fight against it prove crucial. 

Peter, on the other hand, will become sexually entangled with one of the young heiresses, Helga (Marie ForsÃ¥), further involving himself and his sister in the evil events to come--namely, the reincarnation of the vampiric Baroness in the form of one of the young women. 

As for the film's sexual content, there are several lesbian encounters (the loft in the barn proves a popular spot for a roll in the hay) as well as those between Peter and Helga, whose libido is increasing uncontrollably under the influence of Frau Wanda and her minions.  There's even a hint of incest in the relationship between Julia and Peter.


No X-rated action takes place (Sarno's first hardcore film, SLEEPYHEAD with Georgina Spelvin, would be made the same year) but what there is rates a pretty "hard" R.  And if you enjoy female nudity in itself there's quite a pleasing variety to be seen throughout.

As in another of his films I got to review some years ago, CONFESSIONS OF A YOUNG AMERICAN HOUSEWIFE, Sarno is able to integrate the sex scenes into the plot well enough so that they don't stand out like a sore thumb or bring the story to a halt.  They're employed to good effect--tastefully, one might even say--and never as padding. Most of the time they barely even seem gratuitous.

Performances are uniformly good, with Nadia Henkowa's Frau Wanda the unchallenged center of attention as we're waiting for the impending reincarnation of the Baroness.  She's marvelous, reminding me of a theatrical cross between Martin Landau and Theda Bara, with a slyly expressive face that skirts the edges of overacting without ever going over.  Prim and straightlaced in her black housekeeper's outfit and tightly-wound hair (all the women on her staff dress this way), her transitions from matronly to wantonly gorgeous are stunning. 


Sarno's script is somber, never campy--intentionally or otherwise--all the way to its somewhat abrupt ending (which Sarno seems to favor).  In look and mood it's as though a Hammer production and a Jess Franco film met halfway to a screening of Roman Polanski's DANCE OF THE VAMPIRES (aka "The Fearess Vampire Killers") and decided to spend the weekend together. 

The surprising thing for me is the degree to which this is a genuine, sincerely-wrought horror film, and not simply sexploitation with horror elements.  As a sort of female DRACULA reimagining, it more than carries its own weight alongside many of the mainstream vampire tales I've seen.

----------------------

"SIN YOU SINNERS"

The second film on the disc is a fervid and wonderfully lurid 73 minutes of sleazertainment entitled SIN YOU SINNERS.  It was released in the pre-nudity era of 1963 when naughty movies relied more on shock value and pure, unadulterated sleaze to titillate adult audiences. 

We get plenty of that here in the form of an over-the-hill stripper named Bobbi (June Colbourne) who, inexplicably, keeps wowing her male audiences in the dive where she works even though she looks like she should be playing somebody's psycho-mom on "Leave It to Beaver."
 

Not only that, but she keeps a studly young gigolo named Dave (Derek Murcott) at home, where he indulges her with wet, sloppy kisses whenever she feels randy.  (Murcott reminds me of porn actor Eric Edwards, who would co-star in Sarno's CONFESSIONS OF A YOUNG AMERICAN HOUSEWIFE.) Bobbi's spinster daughter Julie (Dian Lloyd) also lives with them and reluctantly helps in Bobbi's illegal fortune-telling scam that she has on the side. 

Why men still lust after her, and why Dave and Julie stick around despite her being a spiteful, narcissistic old bag, is revealed when we discover the truth behind the strange amulet Bobbi obtained in Haiti and alway wears.  When the secret of the amulet is revealed, everyone including various prostitutes and other acquaintances from the club start plotting to get it away from her, with betrayal and death as the result.

June Colbourne is a hoot as super-sleazy Bobbi, impressive whether chewing the scenery like a female Edward G. Robinson or delivering the soliloquy in which she describes her mystical experience in Haiti with evocative intensity.


Equally good is Dian Lloyd's sensitive performance as Julie, a lonely, fearful girl yearning for love from both abusive strangers she meets in coffee shops and also from her mother's live-in lover Dave.  Lloyd is fine in the role and helps make the film as watchable as it is.  The rest of the cast are, for the most part, unpolished but enthusiastic.

Direction is credited to Anthony Farrar--it's his only IMDb credit, with Sarno listed as an uncredited co-director.  The film is competently and sometimes even stylishly directed, with good use of the extremely low budget and shoddy sets.  The editing is a bit iffy at times.

In addition to simple pulp exploitation, Sarno's script is an engaging character study steeped in lowlife desperation.  The stark, shadowy black-and-white photography is ideal for such a dreary and often nightmarish world, and so is the fact that the battered, ravaged print used here--apparently the best one available--seems to be on its last legs.


It's as though the film has been rescued from the junk heap with moments to spare, its images clinging desperately to the celluloid, and we're lucky to have what's left despite its many flaws including constant scratches and several alarming jump-cuts where scenes have been pieced back together. 

Since I grew up watching films in this condition, both in theaters and on the late show, I find it wonderfully nostalgic and even strangely comforting to be able to enjoy a film with old-fashioned imperfections.

Many modern viewers may find SIN YOU SINNERS a difficult film to sit through due to these factors alone, while others, hopefully, will appreciate its genuine "grindhouse" appeal.  The best thing about it, in any case, is that it's just so endearingly, life-affirmingly sleazy.

EXTRAS:

The Blu-ray disc from Film Movement Classics comes with an attractively illustrated booklet containing an essay by author/critic/film historian Tim Lucas.  Both features (2K digital restoration) are in 1.78:1 widescreen with stereo sound. No subtitles.  In addition to trailers for both films, extras include a commentary track for VAMPIRE ECSTASY by producer Chris Nebe and two informative interview featurettes, one with Joe Sarno and one with both Sarno and Nebe.

Film Movement Official Website

Buy it at Amazon.com:
Blu-ray
DVD

Street date: October 25, 2016


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Sunday, June 30, 2019

Entertainment For Sex Maniacs! (Burlesque Scene From "Sex Madness", 1938) (video)




The burlesque theater draws all the town's most sex-obsessed citizens...

...with its wantonly uninhibited entertainment.

For a few moments of pleasure...a lifetime of shame and misery!


I neither own nor claim any rights to this material.  Just having some fun with it. Thanks for watching!


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Monday, March 23, 2009

42nd St Pete Reviews Severin's THE SINFUL DWARF DVD

This is sick shit and I’m enjoying every minute of it. -42nd St Pete

The Sinful Dwarf 1974 from Box Office International From Severin Films

It says on the box that Severin Films may go to hell for releasing this and I’ll be going along for watching it. When you think of epic dwarfsploitaton , several classic performances come to mind: Louis De Jesus being pleasured from a severed head in Bloodsucking Freaks, Billy Barty turning into a sparkler in The Undead, Angelo Rossito falling head first on his axe in Dracula vs Frankenstein, and Torbin Billie’s tour de force performance in The Sinful Dwarf.

Only an auteur like Harry Novak would have the keen insight to realize the cultural impact The Sinful Dwarf would have. Only a company like Severin Films would have the balls to release this film, beautifully restored from a pristine 35mm print. You’d be hard pressed to find a film with more depravity crammed into a 95 minute running time. If Jack Black was a breech birth, this might have been the result. Torbin, at times, actually reminds me of Jack’s performance in the King Kong remake.

Before the credits roll, our miniature madman has lured a young girl into the bushes with a wind up toy, hit her over the head with his cane, and dragged her back to his attic lair where other girls are imprisoned. He has a drunken slob mother, he shoots the girls up with drugs as they lie around in a crappy room naked. A British couple rent a room and have sex in a hot softcore scene. This is Danish and it really pushes the envelope similar to They Call Her One Eye (aka Thriller: A Cruel Picture). The Dwarf is selling the chics and this was way before the internet.

Torbin plays the piano while “Lady Lash” sings. The Brits seem unfazed by this, but they are interested in the attic. Cut to a john having sex with a semi-comatose girl. The Brit’s wife, who is the most attractive in the film, hears noises, one of the girls servicing a trick. This is some twisted shit. Great sex scenes, the Danes invented this stuff. You could imply just about anything and it wasn’t uncommon to have near hardcore scenes in mainstream films there.

Scenes of The Dwarf in bed with his mother are pretty unsettling. They want to “get the Blonde”. They need new girls as these are using too much heroin. It gets sicker, Mom’s dope connection is a toy store. Mom looks like Sarah Palin after she got hit in the face with a hockey puck. A Girl gets fake whipped.

The toy store’s drug runner gets killed, so they hire the Brit, mainly to get his wife for the midget, ah, dwarf, ah, little bastard. She gets caught in the attic and chained up by Mother & Dwarf. Funny, the younger chics are buck naked, she is in bra & panties. Eventually she gets humped by the drooling dwarf. This is sick shit and I’m enjoying every minute of it.

The law is closing in after a teddy bear od’s on heroin. The cops really want the “little bastard” . The cops find the girls and now go dwarf hunting. Mom gets shot and the Dwarf caves in a cop's skull. The Dwarf falls off the roof with a wet splat .

This is great stuff, the print is excellent, you’ve never seen the Box Office International logo look this gorgeous. The extras are limited to a fake Severin documentary about the film and it’s controversy, and also a trailer under the Abducted Bride title, radio spots, and an easter egg with a trailer for the movie under the Sinful Dwarf title, with some awesome narration (EDITOR NOTE: I actually helped supply Severin with the trailer, I couldn’t get a hold of a higher quality copy, hence why it is only an easter egg. Still, you have to give a company like Severin the credit for look out for any and all extras for the film and being willing to include it at all, some labels lacking a higher quality material would just exclude it).

Why are you still reading this people? ITS TIME TO GO TO HELL with Severin and the Sinful Dwarf!
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Thursday, February 12, 2009

Last House on the Beach Severin DVD Review by 42nd St Pete

Last House on the Beach 1978 from Severin Films. Directed by Franco Prosperi. Starring Ray Lovelock, Florinda Bolkan, Sherry Buchanan, & Laura Trotter.


Last House on the Left rippoff by the director of Mondo Cane. Real high on the cringe factor as three scumbags rob a bank, then hide out at a beach front house where a nun and five school girls are staying. One of crooks caves in the maids skull with an iron. Another of the guys tries to rape one of the girls and gets the business end of a rat tailed comb shoved into his groin.


The threesome torment and rape the girls. First the nun is raped. Then, one of the guys puts on make up and he and the guy who got stabbed double team one of the girls. The nun makes a deal with Aldo, the head douchebag. She’ll fix up the guy who got stabbed if they leave the girls alone. He agrees, but when one of the girls tries to escape, she is raped with a tree branch and left dead on the floor. Finally the nun gets the upper hand and she and the girls extract bloody revenge.


Florinda Bolkan is great in the lead as the nun. Lovelock is a convincing sadist and you despise him and his gang. An extra is an interview with Ray Lovelock, who is actually Italian. Franco Prosperi was one of the guys who created the phenomenon known as the “Mondo” movie. Mondo Cane, Africa Addido, and Farewell Uncle Tom are all part of his resume. Last House on the Beach was part of a slew of Italian ripoffs inspired by the granddaddy of sick flicks, Last House on the Left and each one was progressively grimmer than the original. The print is great and other extras include the German & Italian trailers.


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Devil Hunter Severin DVD Review by 42nd St Pete

Devil Hunter 1980 from Severin Films. Directed by Jess Franco.


Great print, but its 89 minutes that seems like four hours. This film has all the low budget Franco charm: out of sync dubbing, cheezy gore, ample nudity, racism, & really bad acting. This film was on VHS , courtesy of the defunct Transworld as Mandingo Manhunter.


Shot on some island, or the Newark Botanical Gardens, we see an actress get kidnapped, interspersed with footage of natives sacrificing a girl to a huge , naked black guy , with bulging , bloodshot eyes. The actress is drugged & kidnapped for a 6 million dollar ransom. The black chic has her innards ripped out.


Peter( Al Cliver) is called in to deliver the ransom. The three kidnappers are like the 3 Stooges, actually the Stooges would be smarter than this band of jerk offs. One guy bitches that the “foliage” is creeping him out. Then why did you pick a jungle island? The actress, Ursula Fellner, is a willowy blonde that is half naked and chained up. She is abused through the entire film, just like she was in Sadomania. She is raped, standing up, by the lead bad guy, who’s gun is hanging between his legs during the rape. How phallic.


The natives, who look like they just left an 80’s disco, pray to a bulging eyed idol that looks like a Weirdo Model by Ed’ Big daddy” Roth. Now there’s a dated reference. They point out that their jungle has been invaded by white folk. This riles up the big guy, who goes in search of the intruders. One is decapitated. In the close up of his “severed head” his neck has a pulse and his tongue is moving. The “blood” looks like a mixture of red food dye & honey. Blood is supposed to flow like water, not ooze like snot.


Peter arranges a swap, the money for the girl. This goes badly as a shoot out starts and one of the crook’s blonde girlfriend gets shot in the leg. The helicopter is about to explode. No smoke trail or anything. Now you see it, then there is a explosion. The actress has now been captured by the cannibals. Peter finds the kidnappers camp and the wounded woman. He chains her up , but she gets free and is killed by the big guy. After all of the minor characters are wiped out, Peter faces the big guy, who now has the actress, in a fight to the death on a cliff.


Not exactly a career highlight for Al Cliver as he fights a big , naked black guys, who junk seems to fill the camera in some scenes. Too many close ups of a big black dick & yam bag. This was the “restored” footage ? Shoulda stayed lost if you ask me. The big guy gets tossed off the cliff, Al gets the girl and the natives trash the idol. End of story.


This film is best viewed with a bunch of friends, lots of liquor, and a bong. The only saving grace is the hot chicks. Even the rape scene is boring. For Franco completests and insomniacs only. Extras are a new interview with Franco.


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Wednesday, September 10, 2008

Deathrow Gameshow DVD Review from BCI

The movie was directed by a man named Mark Pirro and released by Piromount Pictures (no I'm not kidding) and whose company logo is a boob. Really it’s a boob with a nipple. This movie is one of those 80s crapfests with tons of boobs, teased hair, humor that isn't really funny, but sort of in the offensive stupid way, and a lot of super obvious puns. It's certainly not good in the right way, in the evil sort of 80s brand humor. It reminds of what the guy who made Hobgoblins would have made if he had more money. It maybe funny, but I’m not sure. It is really fun 80s sleaze crap that’s worth watching. If anything it is certainly not the horror themed movie the old Media VHS tape cover suggested. Thrill at a stuntman hanging from a car at speeds of up to 5 MPH. There is also tons of 80s cheese and a Deathrow Gameshow theme song. Really Rick Sloane may have made this.

It's paired with The Kidnapping of the President From BCI and is anamorphically enhanced and the print looks mint, the audio is clean and free of any problems. It’s an easy recommendation for fans of 80s sleaze crap.
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