The Gore Gore Girls

The Gore Gore Girls is a 1972 comedy horror splatter film directed by Herschell Gordon Lewis. It was intended to be a reflective-parody of his previous films, and meant to be his final film for the next 30 years until 2002’s Blood Feast 2: All U Can Eat. While the film's violence received much criticism, the film is currently seen as Herschell's most praised film.

The Gore Gore Girls
Directed byHerschell Gordon Lewis
Produced byHerschell Gordon Lewis
Written byAlan J. Dachman
Starring
Music byHerschell Gordon Lewis
CinematographyAlex Ameri
Edited byAlex Ameri
Production
company
Lewis Motion Picture Enterprises
Release date
1972
Running time
95 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish

Plot

Nancy Weston (Amy Farrell), a reporter for The Globe, approaches Abraham Gentry (Frank Kress), an obnoxious private investigator, and offers him $25,000 on behalf of The Globe to investigate the brutal murder of stripper Suzie Cream Puff (Jackie Kroeger). She sweetens the deal with a $25,000 bonus for solving the case. Of course this comes contingent that The Globe gets the exclusive story. Gentry takes the case and begins the investigation of the murder with Weston in tow. When at the club, Gentry encounters a waitress, Marlene (Hedda Lubin), whose obnoxiousness rivals his. He gets through her to speak to another stripper and gets his first suspect, Joseph Carter.

Soon, another stripper, Candy Cane, gets murdered and Gentry expands his suspect list to Grout (Ray Sager), an unstable veteran who takes pride in crushing the heads of corpses he found when on the battlefields of Vietnam. He relieves tension by drawing faces on squashes and tomatoes and then crushing them with his bare hands. Gentry also suspects the leader of a radical feminist group that riots in the strip club, carrying banners with catchy phrases like "Lewd is Crude", "Quit with Tit" and "Women Right On!". Pickles, another stripper, is murdered and has her buttocks mutilated with a meat tenderizer hammer before having it salt and peppered. A badge with "Women Right On!" is found at the scene.

Meanwhile, Gentry buys Weston many drinks to keep her drunk and out of his way. During one of Weston's drunken episodes she admits she's attracted to Gentry. Gentry ignores this and concentrates on the case. His investigation takes him to the owner of the strip clubs in town, Mr. Marzdone Mobilie (Henny Youngman). Gentry then coerces Mobilie into holding an amateur stripper contest with a $1,000 prize, which also works as the beginning of a plan for Gentry's trap.

After having a few too many drinks, Gentry encourages Weston to perform the amateur stripper contest in which she goes all out by "taking it all off" and wins the $1,000 cash prize. Gentry accompany's Weston back to her apartment and lets her rest on her couch as he seemingly leaves. Soon, the killer arrives and Gentry, who anticipated that the killer would do just that, appears after hiding behind a door and takes off the killer's hood revealing Marlene. He also further reveals more when he pulls off her shirt revealing burn marks on her chest, literally obscuring her breasts. After a brief struggle, Marlene falls out a balcony window and lands on the street below where her head is crushed by an oncoming car.

Gentry then reveals his case in a long monologue to Nancy Weston about following the clues which Gout told him earlier about Marlene being burned in a fire which her breasts were burned off. This drew the conclusion that she was killing all those strippers out of jealousy and hatred to their own beauty which Marlene's was now taken from her. Weston is somewhat angry that Gentry used her as bait to trap Marlene into revealing herself as the killer, but accepts for the risk was worth it. Gentry and Weston profess their love for each other as she tells him that the story will make a great contribution to The Globe and both of them get "down to business" (making out), before Gentry looks at the camera and tells the viewers that it's over and to leave them alone.

The closing title card then appears reading: "We announce with pride: this movie is over!"

Cast

  • Frank Kress as Abraham Gentry
  • Amy Farrell as Nancy Weston
  • Hedda Lubin as Marlene
  • Henny Youngman as Marzdone Mobilie
  • Russ Badger as Lt. Anderson
  • Jackie Kroeger as Suzie Cream Puff
  • Nora Alexis as Lola Prize

Release

The Gore Gore Girls was released on home video by the defunct Midnight Video distribution company on VHS in the mid 1980s. The film was first released on DVD by Something Weird Video in 2000,[1] digitally mastered and featuring audio commentary by Herschell Gordon Lewis.[2]

The film was refused classification in Australia by the Office of Film and Literature Classification upon its review in 2005 and remains banned in the country.[3]

Critical reception

The reception of the film was polarized, but more positive than Herschell's previous films. The violence & gore was seen by some as excessive and acting was criticized as well. However, the film's themes on sex-positivity, Vietnam War trauma, & modesty were seen to have merit. Allmovie wrote, "Herschell Gordon Lewis' final feature is so crudely lensed and unrelentingly violent that it's tempting to believe the whole thing was made solely as a prank", calling it "a fascinatingly sick swan song".[4] Sean Leonard from HorrorNews.net gave the film a positive review, writing, "The Gore Gore Girls features decent-at-best acting, some uncomfortable edits, and a plot that repeats itself over and over until it seems an ending might be necessary. At the same time, it features hilarious gory scenes right from the start, with ridiculousness and schlock around every corner."[5] G. Noel Gross of DVD Talk rated the film four out of five stars, calling it a classic, and "One of the sickest, sleaziest movies it has been my pleasure to witness".[6]

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See also

References

  1. "The Gore Gore Girls (1972) - Company credits". Internet Movie Database. Retrieved 9 July 2012.
  2. "Something Weird Video - GORE GORE GIRLS, AKA BLOOD ORGY - Special Edition DVD". somethingweird.com. Retrieved 9 July 2012.
  3. "The Gore Gore Girls (1972)". refused-classification.com. Retrieved 9 July 2012.
  4. Fred Beldin. "The Gore Gore Girls (1972)". Allmovie. Retrieved 13 June 2012.
  5. Leonard, Sean. "Film Review: The Gore Gore Girls (1972)". HorrorNews.net. HorrorNews. Retrieved 2 November 2019.
  6. Gross, G. "The Gore Gore Girls: Special Edition : DVD Talk Review of the DVD Video". DVDTalk.com. DVD Talk. Retrieved 2 November 2019.
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