Goldilocks and the Three Bares

Goldilocks and The Three Bares is a 1963 nudie-cutie film from the legendary exploitation team of Herschell Gordon Lewis and David F. Friedman. The title has absolutely nothing to do with the famous fable which inspired the title. Appropriately billed as the "first nudist musical" (not to be confused with The First Nudie Musical, 1976), it has considerably more depth than their prior attempts at this genre.

Goldilocks and the Three Bares
Directed byHerschell Gordon Lewis (as Lewis H. Gordon)
Produced byThomas J. Dowd
David F. Friedman (as Davis Freeman)
Screenplay byWilliam R. Johnson
StarringRex Marlow
Allison Louise Downe
Alison Edwards (as Vickie Miles)
William Kerwin (as Tommy Sweetwood)
Netta Mallina
Gene Berk
Music byLathrop Wells
CinematographyHerschell Gordon Lewis (as Marvin Lester)
Production
company
D&R Pictures
Distributed byDore Productions
Something Weird Video
Release date
  • September 6, 1963 (1963-09-06)
Running time
69 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Budget$25,000 estimated

Plot

The film follows the perils of nightclub singer Eddie Livingston (Rex Marlow), as he pursues press agent Alison Edwards (Downe). Livingston's comic foil Tommy Sweetwood is an unsuccessful comedian who manages to offend his entire audience in one way or another with his brash, insensitive humor. Alison likes Eddie enough, but she hides a dark secret; she is a nudist! The two go back and forth playing cat and mouse as Eddie sings a series of Bobby Vinton-ish ballads like "Good Things Happen When I'm with You".

One day, Tommy follows Alison on one of her clandestine weekend getaways and discovers her dirty little secret, promptly passing the information along to Eddie. Unable to cope with such a libertine concept in the conservatism of the early 1960s, Eddie flips out on Alison during a radio broadcast. But Tommy has been enlightened by his visit to the nudist camp, and plays Cupid for the star-crossed lovers, and the three soon decide to spend the next weekend at the camp. As with almost any non-nudists in these films upon first trying nudism, Eddie embraces the healthy purity of such a way of life, and becomes a firm believer. This, of course, is parlayed through a lengthy set of sequences showing the film's characters enjoying a smattering of activities nude, such as horseback riding, yachting, swimming and water skiing (all at the insistence of producer Dowd).

The "star power" of Goldilocks extends to the appearance of former world light heavyweight professional boxing champion Joey Maxim as the owner of his eponymous nightclub where Eddie and Tommy perform. Maxim was so unprepared for his role as himself that he would read his lines off his shirt cuff.

History

With slightly higher production values than The Adventures of Lucky Pierre (1961) and Daughter of the Sun (1962), a series of artistically photographed musical sequences and somewhat more "star power", Goldilocks stands out from the other five entries of this phase of Lewis and Friedman's partnership. It also showcases the more clownish side of Lewis regular William Kerwin, who otherwise typically takes on the straight-edge, leading man role. His character's name, Tommy Sweetwood, is also the name under which he was billed, once again to avoid SAG regulations.

Another Lewis mainstay is Allison Louise Downe, appearing under her usual pseudonym Vicki Miles. The main star of the film, would-be crooner and nine-fingered Rex Marlow, was reportedly an employee of producer Thomas Dowd, who insisted (among many other things) that the film be a vehicle to springboard Marlow into stardom. Unfortunately for Marlow, his only other silver screen appearance would be in the Arch Hall Jr. western vanity project Deadwood 76. Ironically, in that film, Marlow does no singing at all.

The film was thought to be lost for over 36 years[1] until Something Weird Video released it on VHS for the first time. Before its discovery, the writer of A Taste of Blood: The Films of Herschell Gordon Lewis, Christopher Wayne Curry, said in an interview with Lewis that he hoped the film would be found one day, to which Lewis replied, "Oh my, I hope not."

Critical reception

Allmovie's review of the film was negative, writing "director Herschell Gordon Lewis turns in surprisingly dull work that doesn't hint at the quite individual style exhibited in many of his other films."[2]

References

  1. In the book A Taste of Blood: The Films of Herschell Gordon Lewis the film was still listed as being "lost" at the time of its first publication in 1998. It then made its video debut in 1999.
  2. Craig Butler. "Goldilocks and the Three Bares (1963)". Allmovie. Retrieved July 1, 2012.
  • Goldilocks and the Three Bares/Sinderella and the Golden Bra Special Edition DVD, audio commentary by Herschell Gordon Lewis and Dave Friedman
  • Daniel Krogh; John McCarthy (1982). Herschell Gordon Lewis and His World of Exploitation Art.
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