H.O.T.S.

H.O.T.S. is a 1979 sex comedy. The film stars three Playboy Playmates Susan Kiger (January 1977), Pamela Bryant (April, 1978), and Sandy Johnson (June, 1974), as well as former Miss USA of 1972, Lindsay Bloom, sexploitation actress Angela Aames, and later genre movie veteran Lisa London in her film debut. Danny Bonaduce appears in a supporting role.[2]

H.O.T.S
Directed byGerald Seth Sindell
Produced byW. Terry Davis
Don Schain
Gerald Seth Sindell
Written byW. Terry Davis
Screenplay byCheri Caffaro
Joan Buchanan
Story byW. Terry Davis
Cheri Caffaro
Joan Buchanan
StarringLisa London
Susan Kiger
Music byDavid Davis
CinematographyHarvey Genkins
Edited byBarbara Pokras
Distributed byMid-America Releasing
Anchor Bay Entertainment
Release date
  • July 20, 1979 (1979-07-20) (USA)
Running time
98 minutes
Country USA
LanguageEnglish
Box office$1.4 million[1]

The cast frequently appears in tight white T-shirts with the H.O.T.S. logo and red-orange shorts. Some reviewers believe this wardrobe inspired the Hooters uniforms.[3]

Plot

Honey Shayne (Kiger) is a freshman at Fairenville University (known, according to a title card, as "Good old F.U."). After unsuccessfully pledging the Pi sorority, and being publicly ridiculed by sorority president Melody Ragmore (Bloom), Honey joins with three other unsuccessful pledges (O'Hara, Terri, and Samantha) to form a new sorority (to be known as H.O.T.S. after their initials ) with the goal of stealing all of the rival sorority's boyfriends.

The movie includes a number of competitions intended to accomplish that goal, including a fundraiser (a kissing booth), a dance, and a climactic game of strip football. Both groups play pranks on the other and attempt to avoid disciplinary actions from the F.U. administration. A subplot deals with the attempts of two bungling gangsters to recover money hidden in the renovated building housing the sorority.

A running gag during the movie is the source of the name "H.O.T.S." While the closing credits reveal that the name is an anagram of the first names of the four founders, other characters in the film believe it to stand for Hands Off Those Suckers and Hold On To Sex. At one point, the girls claim it stands for Help Out The Seals.

Cast

Main

  • Susan Kiger as Honey Shayne
  • Lisa London as O'Hara
  • Pamela Jean Bryant as Teri Lynn
  • Kimberly Cameron as Sam
  • Mary Steelsmith as Clutz
  • Angela Aames as Boom-Boom Bangs
  • Marjorie Andrade as Conchita
  • Cece Bullard as Debbie
  • Karen Smith as Candi
  • Robyn Martin as Brandy
  • Lindsay Bloom as Melody Ragmore
  • K.C. Winkler as Cynthia
  • Sandy Johnson as Stephanie
  • Marilyn Rubin as Jackie

Supporting

  • Constance Carlton as Pi Girl
  • Marion Leeuw as Pi Girl
  • Nancy Plummer as Pi Girl
  • Cynthia Nigh as Pi Girl
  • Cendi Campbell as Pi Girl
  • Donald Petrie as Doug
  • Larry Gilman as Mad Dog
  • Dan Reed as Stormin' Normin'
  • Danny Bonaduce as Richie Walker
  • David Gibbs as Macho Man
  • Marvin Katzoff as Big Boy
  • Steve Bond as John
  • Talmadge Scott as Hunk (credited as Talmage Scott)
  • Ken Olfson as Dean Larry Chase
  • Richard Bakalyan as Charlie Ingels (credited as Dick Bakalyan)
  • Louis Guss as Bugs Benny
  • Dorothy Meyer as Ezzetta
  • Scott Ellsworth as Professor
  • Bunny Summers as Opera Singer
  • Harvey Parry as Officer O'Toole
  • Ted Grossman as Officer Goldstein
  • Gary Lee Davis as Patterson Man #1
  • Dar Robinson as Patterson Man #2
  • C.D. Smith as Patterson Man #3
  • Wayne King Sr. as Patterson Man #4 (credited as Wayne King)
  • Pat Moorehead as Pilot
  • Angel Pineira as Lady with Shopping Cart
  • Slinky as Himself
  • Sugar Bear as Honey Bear
gollark: Overlooked how?
gollark: If I become evil supreme world dictator I would totally do that, except everyone has phones with tons of proprietary firmware and weirdness anyway.
gollark: It would be funny, though, to make ominous spying devices look like greeting card controllers so people doubt anyone who notices them.
gollark: Technically, speakers work as microphones.
gollark: I feel like you could have said that in less text.

References

  1. Richard Nowell, Blood Money: A History of the First Teen Slasher Film Cycle Continuum, 2011 p 259
  2. "H.O.T.S." TCM database. Turner Classic Movies. Retrieved February 21, 2016.
  3. Williams, Freeman (December 20, 2002). "H.O.T.S." The Bad Movie Report. Retrieved September 12, 2018.
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