IMDb RATING
5.1/10
2.8K
YOUR RATING
A young reporter enlists the help of a top notch private eye to solve the murder of a female stripper at a Chicago nightclub.A young reporter enlists the help of a top notch private eye to solve the murder of a female stripper at a Chicago nightclub.A young reporter enlists the help of a top notch private eye to solve the murder of a female stripper at a Chicago nightclub.
- Awards
- 1 nomination
- Director
- Writer
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaThis was the only movie Herschell Gordon Lewis submitted to the MPAA; they gave it an X rating.
- GoofsIn the beginning of the movie, while Abraham is talking to the stripper in the bar, her yellow panties change into a blue thong.
- Quotes
Barney the Bartender: Hey, Charlie! Take over for me! I gotta take a shit!
- Alternate versionsThe two most violent murder sequences were heavily censored in the New Zealand videotape version.
- ConnectionsFeatured in Extra Weird (2003)
Featured review
Ah, face mutilated with a meat tenderizer, throat slit, and this one had her ass beat in.
Now, just what are you expecting from the director of The Wizard of Gore, Blood Feast, and Blood Feast 2: All U Can Eat. Herschell Gordon Lewis can certainly pile on the gore. There is so much gore that you quickly forget what that naked woman looked like before the killer got started.
There is actually a story here. Abraham Gentry, played by Frank Kress in his only role, is hired by The Globe to investigate a stripper's death. He is accompanied by cub reporter Nancy, played by Amy Farrell, whose had a couple of TV roles, but only one other movie role, a stew on Airport 1975.
The strippers are typical 70s. They wore pasties, didn't have a pole, and danced to cheesy music. The customers were typical for the time, too.
Now, I was an Argento fan long before Juno discovered him, and I was a Lewis fan before Justin Bateman brought him to light in the same film. It's schlock, and the gore is not going to be to everyone's taste, but it is campy fun.
There is actually a story here. Abraham Gentry, played by Frank Kress in his only role, is hired by The Globe to investigate a stripper's death. He is accompanied by cub reporter Nancy, played by Amy Farrell, whose had a couple of TV roles, but only one other movie role, a stew on Airport 1975.
The strippers are typical 70s. They wore pasties, didn't have a pole, and danced to cheesy music. The customers were typical for the time, too.
Now, I was an Argento fan long before Juno discovered him, and I was a Lewis fan before Justin Bateman brought him to light in the same film. It's schlock, and the gore is not going to be to everyone's taste, but it is campy fun.
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- lastliberal
- Feb 14, 2010
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Box office
- Budget
- $63,500 (estimated)
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