"When I hear the term "grindhouse," what I think of is Hollywood Boulevard in the '70s—very much like 42nd Street New York in the '70s." "42nd Street, in its heyday, was a collection of about a dozen cinemas, all contained within one block." "When you would go into these theatres, there was an ever-present feeling of danger." "There was a murder there, one night, and so people, there was a big pandemonium and I'm still sitting there, I wanna see the movie, I don't wanna leave." "I did I stayed, the police came in, they never turned on the house lights." ""We're at the Bijoux Theatre, where it's reported that a man has gone beserk while watching a double-feature horror program." "If you ever saw the movie Midnight Cowboy, that probably had the best depiction of 42nd Street I ever saw in a film." "Because that really was what it was all about;" "it was either people watching movies, or having their own party in the theatre." "Grindhouse?" "It's like did you ever see Pinocchio, Disney's Pinocchio?" "There's a wonderful thing in Disney's Pinocchio where Pinocchio is kidnapped and goes off to this island-Pleasure Island and there's this guy with a derby and a cigar, and he's barking." "He's at a podium and he's saying, "The rough house!" "Go inside, boys, it's the rough house!"" "And that's what I like about it, it's sheer hucksterism." "A grindhouse is a theater that never closes." "Are grindhouse films and exploitation the same?" "Ahh, not really" "Some theaters would show all day and all night and they weren't showing, questionable marginal material, they were showing regular films." "In the late 40s there were probably only about 100 theaters in the United States that you could classify as "grindhouses"." "And so I think it's in the 1960s and the 1970s that you begin to see that association with, inner city urban theaters aka grindhouses and exploitation." "Exploitation basically means; there is an element that you can exploit." "Now whether it's nudity, or sex or violence or a monster or just an idea, a lot of exploitation it's just how outragreous is the idea." "It's something to take advantage of in promotion." "It's, it's a hook to get them into the theater..." ""No one admitted except at the beginning!"" "I'm happy to join the management of the this theater." ""YOU will take an unforgettable journey down deep into the dungeons of hell!"" "Why was this girl chosen to be tortured?" "This motion picture is a vicious expose of a part of a young generation." "Im gonna give you the time of your life, baby." "Scenes ofsuch brutal honesty will be shown on this screen." "Attention hungry housewives." "A mixture of tender romance and pornographic realism." "If you were smart, you'll keep away from prostitutes and pick-ups." "They're not safe." "And they can't be made safe." ""That's a good shot. - "Knock-out!"" " I'm a woman!" "And I'll do as I please!" ""The shocking scenes that you are about to see, are not suggested for the weak." "Soon at this theater." "They'll be coming together." ""Here's your chance to see all the bad..."" ""Ask not what your country can do for you..."" "#AMERICAN GRINDHOUSE#" "And remember:" "Get more out of life." "Go out to a movie." "#IN THE BEGINNING FROM EDISON TO FREAKS#" "You could say that exploitation is as old as the movies themselves." "Thomas Edison's company was making films around the turn of the 20th century." "So there's always been this sort of element of exploitation in the film business from its very earliest days." "You know the old joke goes that as soon as the movie camera was invented, expliotation started like 5 seconds later, somebody said to his girlfriend, Would you mind taking your clothes off for the camera?" "That is the story of exploitation in the cinema." "Now that we have a way to make a permanent record of all of this." "What is it what we want to record." "And by and large that they wanted to record was stuff that was taboo." "Exploitation and the dawn of the motion picture went hand in hand." "Many of Thomas Edison's films from the beginning of the 20th Century were widely considered excessive, salacious, and prurient in content." "Thomas Edison's company helped pave the way for the exploitation film by simply catering to audience's tastes." " You know PT Barnum was a genius." "Part of his genius was just giving people what they wanted." "Combining the sensationalism of PT Barnum and the innovation of" "Edison's moving picture camera, the first feature length exploitation film was released on November 24th, 1913." "Traffic in Souls, in a lot of ways, sort of established the prototype for exploitation films." "During the time around 1910, 1911, 1912, there were these tremendous scares in the United States, in big cities, about the so-called "white slave" traffic, prostitution, forced prostitution." "These tracks usually found-universally found that this traffic didn't really exist, but it captured the popular imagination, and eventually George Lone Tucker a director who was working at Universal put together this film called Traffic in Souls," "which traded on the sensational aspects of the white slave scare." "Traffic in Souls was made for $57,000." "It would gross a staggering $450,000 during its theatrical run, and would place Universal Pictures firmly on the map as one of the major players in the blossoming movie industry." "The film was one of the first feature films made in the United States." "It promised tremendous things in its advertising:" "hundreds of scenes and a cast of thousands and so on, plus this really sensational topic, none of which it really delivered on." "In, you know, good old exploitation fashion." "Exploitation movies flourished in Hollywood during the transition from Silent films to Talkies." "In the Pre-Code Era, the motion picture industry was often viewed as a hotbed of moral depravity." "Even today, it's easy to see why many of these films raised eyebrows." "Pre Code Hollywood in the 1930s." "When you discover them it's kind of like discovering exploitation films, because you're seeing things that you can't believe you're seeing." "There were always woman changing, taking their clothes off, you can see nipples." "To me they're not really like exploitation films." "To me, they sort of like realistic depictions of what was going on in American life because people were really screwed up." "People want to see these things on camera they want to see sex, they wanna see violence, they wanna see drugs." "You know, I think it's important to remember that in the late teens, the early 1920s, movies had only been around twenty, twenty-five years." "They were a very young industry." "They were very susceptible to all sorts of public pressure." "In 1920, Hollywood begins to go through this series of scandals." "So by 1922, there's tremendous pressure on Hollywood to clean up its act, that people are thinking this is just a Sodom and Gomorrah on the west coast." "And so finally, the heads all get together, and they decide that they're going to bring in Will Hays." "Will Hays is the Postmaster General, he's kind of a Republican stalwart, he's an elder in the Presbyterian church, and they say," ""Will Hays, come out here, come to work for us, and help us clean up our image."" ""To the Warner Brothers to whom this due credit, for this, the beginning of a new era in music and motion pictures." "I offer my solicitations and my sincerest appreciations."" "This had to be like the cushiest job in the entire film industry, right?" "Something like $100 thousand dollars a year during the depression!" ""Service is the supreme commitment to life." "It can be argued that the day the Hollywood Production Code was established the real exploitation film industry was born." "The Code really did create exploitation films much like Prohibition created speakeasies so you really had to go of your way to find these pictures." "The Hays Code created all of these sort of carnie "shysters"." "But before the Production Code would be strictly enforced, one more major Hollywood film would test the boundaries of acceptable tastes and would ironically, become one of the most infamous films ever released on the exploitation circuit." "MGM, after Dracula and Frankenstein they said we have to make a horror picture." "And you know, we're Metro, we're the best so therefore we will make the best horror picture." "And they hired Tod Browing who made Dracula and he made Freaks." "Freaks is an MGM picture it's well produced." "It is a really good movie but they got more than they bargained for." "Freaks may be the most shocking and controversial film ever released during the pre-Code era." "Browning's choice to cast real life circus oddities caused an outrage resulting in a backlash that cost the studio $160,000 in ticket sales." "Although today, it is widely considered to be the director's masterpiece, the release of Freaks effectively put an end to Tod Browning's prosperous career." "It was released during the so-called "Pre-Code" period, before the production code was really being enforced." "And MGM sort of immediately cans it, you know puts it on the shelf but some years later, exploitation entrepaneur" "Dwain Esper got the rights to Freaks and gave it a second life during the 1940s and into the 1950s by releasing it on the exploitation circuit." "#LET HE WHO IS WITHOUT SIN..." "SEE OUR MOVIE#" "Before licensing Freaks from MGM, director Dwain Esper made the early grind house film, Maniac." "Loosely inspired by Edgar Allen Poe's The Black Cat and taking various cues from Universal horror films of the time," "Maniac was written by Espier's wife, Hildegard, and produced during the summer of 1934." "A benchmark in the evolution of exploitation," "Maniac represents the classical age of exploitation films which prospered during The Great Depression." "The exploitation filmmakers, they weren't showing in Hollywood owned theaters." "They existed completely outside the law." "with its emphasis on sex and violence, maniac also established a blueprint for subsequent exploitation films in which it's production quality took a back seat to the required doses of graphic content." "Dwain Esper was interesting because the films that he made were really amazingly awful." "But they were movies that drew audiences." "The films of Dwain Esper and others like him represent a group of nomadic independent filmmakers and distributors who traveled the country in the 1930s and peddled the virtues of cinematic sin to thrill seeking audiences." "Affectionately known as The 40 Thieves, these carnie road show men had little regard for proper business ethics and stopped at nothing to make a quick buck." "Grind house movies and exploitation movies were the domain of kind of fly by night independents who swooped in and gave the public what they really wanted, but they had to do it in marginal little cracks in cities and rural areas where they'd find a place to show this stuff." "Just pitch a tent or find a theater that wasn't part of the Hollywood system where they could just grind away." "One of the key things about exploitation movies during this time was thay they were virtually always shown for Adults Only." "Hollywood films were for everyone, but these films by having that "adults only"" "told people that this was something different this is something out of the ordinary." "This was something that I'm not going to see when I go down to see that MGM film or that 20th Century Fox film." "There's going to be something you know maybe a little special in this movie." "Many of the exploitation films released by The 40 Thieves reveled in the sensationalism of true crime." "Take for example police sherrif Louis Sonney." "After achieving nationwide publicity for his apprehension of train robber Roy Gardner in 1921, Sonney was convinced to re-create the capture of Gardner for his first film,You Can't Beat The Rap!" ""Well, goodbye Roy." " Good luck"" "Sonney was the sherif of Centralia Washington and actually tracked him down, caught him, arrested him in a hotel up there." ""Mr Sonney, I don't how to begin to thank you for all you've done..."" "They initally started with live appearances, where he and Roy Gardner would appear together." "This established this wonderful tradition in exploitation of;" "it's okay to talk about all this stuff that's off limits, it's okay for crime to pay and long as in the end everyone gets their cumuppins." "So as long as in the end, Roy Gardner is in shackles and is testifying to never get involved in crime it's all okay." ""I paid the hard way..."" "But in the mean time you can exploit all the stuff that's off limits." "That was essential to how these things opperated and Louis Sonney was the guy who originally did that." "And that became the way exploitation filmmakers got around the criticism of what they were doing." "But we're mearling offering lessons in morality." "Some people did go hoping to learn something about either drug use or child birth, or whatever the case happened to be." "#IT'S NOT VULGAR..." "IT'S EDUCATIONAL#" ""It happens to the rich." "It happens to the poor, perhaps to your own son or daughter!" "When a girl faces disgrace, many times the parent are at faulty." "Trying to keep today's teenagers innocent through ignorance, it simply will not work!" "Too many learn the hard way." "Your girl or boy could be the next victim of unwed motherhood or VD bring them to see the truths and learn facts, facts, facts before it's too late!" "At that point in history and maybe even today, alot of guys didn't stand in the room when their wives gave birth and if they did, they didn't stand down on the business end." "You know, guys used to pace in the waiting room, waiting, waiting, waiting for somebody to tell them what kind of kid they had." "And you're, your're right it was just something that most people even people who had children had never seen." ""Love may be the most beautiful or most dangerous thing in the world." "But it is never a thing to be gigled about or fouled with dirty stories." "Child birth is a sacred thing." "Exploitation films during this sort of classical era were obviously selling titilation on the one hand, but on the other hand they were also selling education." "This is the why a lot of these films, kind of got a way with it." "Now lets consider that other public enemy, gonereha an arch criminal with a half dozen vulgar alias' such as "The Clap"," ""The Dose", "The Gleet", "The Strain" or "The Running Range"!" "This was information that was hidden away from a lot of people and these movies were providing that information at least to some extent." "So, particularly of the sex hygeine films often the audience was largley made up of women who had no other way of getting this kind of information" "The birth of a baby stuff, you had almost a protective shield around you." "You know Dave Friedman used to call tent evangelists they called them 'sky grifters' because they'd get a big tent and it was almost just like a carnival." "The guy was using God to fleece you of whatever your money was, he had a perfect cover." "And that's what the birth of a baby movies and stuff was, it was the perfect cover for people who might be a little seedy to come in and be respectable and still show you something that had they approached it in a different factor they," "they probably would have been run out of town on a rail." "Perhaps the most infamous of all "birth of a baby"" "films was 1945's Mom and Dad." "Produced and distributed by Kroeger Babb, the film was direeted by" "William "One Shot" Beaudine in just six days and on a budget of $63,000." "It would go on to become the third highest grossing film of the decade." "Mom and Dad had a lecturer, named Elliot Forbes the eminant hygience commentator Elliot Forbes who would travel with the roadshow units, now this of course meant you had like 15 Elliot Forbes in the United States criss-crossing the nation at any given time." ""See Mom and Dad." "You'll be glad you did." "Children under 16 must be in adult company." "See Mom and Dad"" "While films like Mom and Dad continued to appear on Grindhouse cirquit adult themes were still being addressed in the studio films of the 1940s." "The Production Code forced filmmakers to creatively depict sexuality and violence in a much more subtle approach." "The result was a style of motion pictures known today as film noir." "Have'nt you tried to buy my loyalty with money and nothing else?" "What else is there that I can buy you with?" "I've thought about whether there was any kind of connection between grindhouse cinema and film noir and in reality there is." "What's the matter, aren't you going to kiss me?" "Both of these type of films specialize in adult themes." "The difference of course is that in film noir the artists making these movies had to find creative ways to express all this stuff within the constraints of the Production Code." "The grindhouse guys, just showed it." "Grindhouse theaters flourished in red-light districts and skid row sections of major cities by the mid-20th century;" "an image that was illustrated in this film from 1941..." "Probably the best representation of a grindhouse in a mainstream Hollywood film is in "I Wake Up Screaming"." "You know it doesn't seem very well mainted, people are in there because they're sleeping, they are spending the night in the theater becuase they have no place else to go." "It's a very interesting depiction of what a grindhouse is, that you didn't see too often in a mainstream movie." "The depiction of a grindhouse theater in "I Wake Up Screaming" may have been a sign that the Production Code was loosing touch with American audiences." "By the 1950s, the portraial of adult themes in mainstream movies would change once again" "In 1948 you finally had the prosecution that had been brough by the Justice Department." "It ends with a Supreme Court decision known as The Paramount Decision." "That meant - for the Majors - that they no longer had a garanteed place to show their movies, they bassically had to begin to compete in a much more open market place." "And that's when I think the exploitiers thought:" "Our days may be numbered here." "If they start letting Hollywood do these movies, what are we going to do?" "The Paramount decision bassically means that the Production Code, begins to fall apart because there is really no way to enforce it any more." "Once the Production Code begins to fall apart that means" "Hollywood begins to gradually take on these more adult suject matters." "This is the 19 year-old Baby Doll." "She wouln't let her husband come near her." "She wouldn't let the stranger go away." "Why Mr. Vicarro." "You certainly are getting familiar." "For the sort of old line exploitiers and The 40 Thives, that was bad news, because a lot of the topics that they had pursued for years, gradually become the province of Hollywood." "#PERVERSION..." "FOR PROFIT#" "After World War II, sex became a little more acceptable." "It was recognized that at least pin-up and cheesecake art and all of that was really a big moral booster during the war." "And so burlesque became a more acceptable form of entertainment" "I don't think people realize just prevelent striptease and burlesque was in our country." "We are in such a prudish, puritanical moment right now I think people forget that there's always been the grind, theres always been strip, there's always been this side of American showbusiness." "The term bump and grind' was lifted from the burlesque stage and as many of the nation's red light districts burlesque houses made the transition to movie houses the term grindhouse came with it." "This change in venues paid off handsomely for the theater owners, but it was another story for the stripping starlets." "And then a lot of producers in grindhouses understood that the economic benefits of filming burlesque acts and finding venues in which they could show the films was a lot cheaper then sending women around on the circuits" "That was just you know, mana from heaven for the exploiters because they could get Lili St. Cyr and Tempest Storm and all these popular burlesque artists to do a film." "And quite frankly I think these women undersold themselves because they didn't understand this new quote en quote technology an issue that still exists to this day;" "where they said yeah, ok fine you wanna film me doing my act, so what?" "And they didn't understand that, that was going to cut deeply into their ability to make money as a live performer." "And then little by little, once burlesuqe was acceptabe, then it just became the inevitable flood." "I mean how long the the damn going to hold at that point." "Kiss me quick" "And it was like, how much skin can you actually show?" "Besides adapting the tradition of burlesque to exploitation, many of the grindhouse filmmakers turned to the world of men's magazines as a source for insperation." "And as the 50's progressed with relaxed attitudes toward sex, there was serious opposition from concenred organizations as evidensed in this propaganda film produced by The Citizens for Decent Literature." "And then we come to nudist magazines." "If they were printed only the nudist cult, they would never exist." "Group exposure is a hallmark of these cultists." "However it's been well stated that very few blind people join the nudist colony." "Nudist camp movies hit their peak in the post war era with Walter Bibo's The Garden of Eden." "Released in 1954, the film stirred up a considerable amount of controversy." "When The Garden of Eden appears in the mid 1950s, it was also during this much more, seemingly conservative and buttoned down period." "It drew a lot of attention, it also drew a fare amount of censorship activity." "Eager and ready to challenge the censorship issue that faced his film," "Bibo took his case to the New York court of appeals and won." "What that meant was you could show people naked on screen, they just couldn't be engaged in sex." "Encouraged by Bibo's court room triumph, exploitation filmmakers jumped on the bandwagon and pumped out a plethora of nudist camp movies, each more cheeky than the last." "It was a very innocent sort of film where people just kind of walked around, threw a ball here and there and this and that." "And again, much like the birth of a baby films, they promoted it as a healthy lifestyle you know sunshine and fresh air, people with a high moral fiber who just happend to be walking around naked." "But what you really buy is a ticket to see a bunch of people, walking around naked and mostly girls I hope." "#TEENAGE..." "RAMPAGE#" "And so another job, for the police and the courts." "Johny Marvin is now in the hands of the law." "This is the first time he's been caught, but his delinquent tendancies began long before in the conflicts of an unhappy home and in the hangout of the gang which was his refuge" "By the mid 1950s, teenagers were growing up in a world with more progressive attitudes toward sex." "I love you, Jim." "I really mean it." "As the American teenager clashed with the conservatiove morals of the older generation their stories of anger and rebellion found their way to the silver screen." "Teen movies have always been around, if you go as far back as" "Wild Boys On The Road from the 1930s." "Ahh, heck." " Hey whats the matter?" "Somebody stole our gas, c'mon!" "But they didn't really explode until the 1950s." "And I think a lot of it had to do with teenagers living in the suburbs, they had disposable incomes, they had cars." "Rock'n'roll certainly had a large part of it." "Say, they ain't made are they?" " No, that's just the ways kids are dancing nowadays." "They call it rock n rolling, or bop or something like that." "You know generally it was that you were not understood by your parents, you were not understood by your school." "I suppose you're going out again tonight?" " Yeah, so what?" "You were an outcast in someway." "Johnny and two hundread thousaned other youngsters who are arrested each year, are America's number one crime problem." "In the post war era when things changed, people started thinking of young people differently and there also was a lot of crime." "Young people and crime became a Blackboard Jungle kinda thing." "Blackboard Jungle was a tremendously influential movie." "It was not made as an exploitation film but it performed the same functions." "Dragstrip Riot!" "Leading to a fight fought with all the fierce fury of youth." "Dangerously angry one minute!" "Rockin and rollin the next!" "The teen exploitation movies would take a teenage diliema and AIP really knew how to do this well." "AIP was a company, James Nicholson and Sam Arkoff." "They would make posters and come up with titles." "These were pictures that peoples parents wouldn't go see." "Here's 50 thousand dollars go give us that movie!" "They did a lot of crime pictures, they did a lot of juvveile delinquent pictures, they did a lot of horror pictures, science fiction pictures." "All the sort of disreputable genres." "I think a lot of us who came out of the American Independent Movement." "That was the basis for a lot of our work." "It preceeded punk rock and the DIY spirit and they were put together almost the same way punk rock records put together, you know." "Very fast, very cheap, down and dirty, lets get it out there kind of thing." "By the mid-60s, teen exploitation films temporarily diverted their attention to the beach and traded in their pompadours and leather coats for swimming trunks and boogie boards." "The beach movies are so bizarre." "They were really odd." "How do you like this title:" "The Behavior Patern of the Young Adult and its Relation to Primitve Tribe." "I've got a shorter title." " What's that?" " Teenage sex." "The whole point of them was to see tits and ass." "But wholesome, tits and ass." "Teen exploitation films represented a major movie market during the 50s and 60s, even though they were not, solely restricted to the confines of Grindhouse theaters." "Teens needed a place that they could see these films, alone, without adults, and the drive in theater provided the perfect escape." "The drive in theaters also showed a lot of the same product, exploitation product." "But they weren't nessesarily grind, I don't consider those grind." "What they were interested in was the teenage market." "By the time of the drive in movies and films like I Was A Teenage Werewolf." "He turns into this monster!" "Talk about hairy palms." "They specifically were gearing for adolescent, hormonal, horny boys and girls." "So they wanted to go after them and they went after them with whatever was popular at the time" "Now they make Hostel, they make these torture porn movies for kids, but then..." "These pictures all have a lot to say and they're all very interesting." "Most of them are shit, but every so often theres a good one." "Along with the proliferation of teen exploitation films, new ways of depictions of sex in exploitation cinema were also finding their way into the market place." "But upon closer investigation, it would appear that both of these markets may have shared a common audience." "How many times have I told you not to walk around the house like that!" " But dad, it's only a slip." "You heard what I said!" "No go upstairs and put something on." " But dad." "You know, I'm not really sure how many people actually went to go the the" "Beach Party movies, because when I was a kid we all thought they were square." "I think they were actually aimed at adults!" "You know Sam Arkoff was the guy." "No, no, it's the teenage market we don't need money in these old tired stars." "And what do you see Buster Keaton!" "All of a sudden, the Beach Party movies, they were supposed to be aimed at kids and they started bringing Silent Film stars out of retirement." "Please?" "What kid would go see that?" "But my father might?" " Papaya Surprise" " Papaya Surprise?" "Lord Love a Duck with Tuesday Weld." "Have you seen this movie?" "No?" "Oh my God!" "She's a High Schooler is is trying on sweaters with her father, who is getting sexually while she's saying things like" "Perrywinkle Pussycat." "Don't you just love it!" " Masterpiece film." "#SEXPLOITATION FROM NUDIE CUTIES TO ROUGHIES#" "In 1959, director Russ Meyer took the sex film and the celebration of female nudity onscreen a step further." "Both voyeuristic and comical, Meyer's The Immoral Mr. Teas was the incarnation of a critical though short lived style of exploitation movie." "Russ invented the Nudie Cutie" "Besides placing naked women in a contemporary setting outside of the nudist camps," "The Immoral Mr. Teas featured something that nobody else had ever thought a plot." "The Immoral Mr. Teas had a plot and in that plot there were situations with naked girls." "The nudit cuties were very, very innocent and they were basically like pin up calendars come to life." "Russ is very influential to that he made a movie with a plot." "Kinda like The Great Train Robbery, Edwin S. Porter." "These movies and their importance to the history of cinema and narrative filmmaking" "Russ is that way to the history of porno, because he made those Nudie Cuties." "Nudie cuties were unashamed in their depictions of nudity on screen." "The girls were plentiful and the storylines equally ridiculous." "But as the cycle of "nudie cuties" continued to proliferate, a darker and more sinister style of film was also about to emerge." "Get up!" " Get away from her!" "When the violence was added, they were later called roughies" ""Roughies" were just that:" "rough, violent, and raw." "These films offered a startling and uncompromising view of the battle between the sexes;" "a dramatic contrast to the sexual revolution that lay ahead." "You can certainly see elements of what are often referred to as the Roughies in movies as early as Violated from 1953 and The Lonely Sex from later on in the 50s." "Like nudist camp magazines that inspired those films, the "roughies" were adapted from men's pulp magazines." "Take a look at what they are reading." "Go on, they won't even know you're there." "You had Men's Magazines, you know that kind of fixated on these notions of women in danger; tied up and lashed." "It's pulled from the dark ressess of peoples minds, ya know." "And predominetly men." "No please, no." "That these were the male fantasies that were turned into movies" "When these kinda pictures started to play, again when I was in Philidelphia there were always at theaters that would run pictures like Olga's House of Shame and stuff like that." "These pictures were they had a clientele, they were pretty popular." "The Roughies grew out of the Nudie Cutie." "And they're ugly, they're ugly movies really." "Discovering a squeeler amoung her girls," "Olga cuts out a part of a girls tongue as a warning to the others." "More than just the next phase in sexploitation films the "Roughies" represented a deeper shift in the nation's subconscious." "You could say that roughies developed because the culture got really violent." "1963 was really the end of the 50s." "In the grindhouse come these movies, the Roughies where no longer are the women on a pedestal as objects of adoration." "They're things to be beaten and whipped into submission." "That kind of product as it was called was just not thought of in the same breath as the kind of things that played in normal theaters." "Films like The Lusting Hours, directed by The Amero brothers, helped to establish New York City as a major player in the sexploitation film industry." "Featuring the likes of husband and wife team Mike and Roberta Findley and Doris Wishman the roughies that emerged from New York during the 1960s offer a glimpse into the world of Times Square," "42nd Street and the grindhouse theater lifestyle." "The movies coming out of New York were cranked out like sausages." "They were being made by people who were just going out, making a movie maybe over the course of a few weekends or so." "They, they really have this kind taste, this sort of flavor of New York in the 1960s" "Once in a great while, a sensational and starkly realistic motion picture comes to the screen." "This whole different type of film developed where the sex was really intense." "And a huge part of the reason for this, I believe, is because you could not show sex on screen." "So you had to show a substitute." "And violence was the substitute." "#GORE-GALORE#" "Following their production of a series of nudist camp movies, two men" "Hershell Gordon Lewis and Dave Friedman produced what is now often regarded as the archetypal "Roughie", Scum of The Earth." "That same year, the duo stumbled upon an idea for a new kind of movie and the world of exploitation would never be the same again." "Scum of The Earth was a transitional picture." "It was the last picture I ever shot in black and white." "Well it became clear after a while that this particular kind of motion picture that was getting into a field that was terribly crowded because the number of theaters that would play it, that number was quite limited." "And the number of competitors, well they were beginning to swarm" "I began to think they could fill Yankee Stadium." "The question then became the standard question that I ask throughout my what we might laughingly call my feature film career." "What kind of motion picture might there be that the major film companies either will not make or cannot make, but a theater will play and somebody might plop down in a chair to look at." "I was watching some ancient gangster movie on television." "The police shot this fellow full of bullet holes and I said wait a minute as his eyes closed." "I said, that's not right." "And that gave us the idea for that marvelous four letter word G" " O-R-E." "Well the next questions was, what?" "And so was born, Blood Feast" "We were terrified." "I was cutting this thing in my little cutting room in Chicago, and it was to use a euphamism ghastly." "So, we decided to open that movie in Peoria, figuring if we die in Peoria, who will know?" "Instantly, it was a gigantic smash." "So Dave and I looked at each other and said What if we made a decent one?" "With Blood Feast and it's follow up, Two Thousand Maniacs" "Friedman and Lewis unleashed a maddening onslaught of lacerated limbs, dismembered maidens and blood hungry hillbillies." "It's really hard to remember, or to imagine for those of us who were not alive." "What it must have been like to see people be eviserated in movies." "Herschel is the genius who first did that." "Oh my God." "And whether you think that his movies are exciting or not exciting." "Great or terrible, they're incredibly fucking important because nobody had ever thought to do that." "I'm not a big fan of Herschel Gordon Lewis as a filmmaker, but wonderful posters" "The campaign is more important than the film itself!" "You know, he had this extreme gore but grand" "I'll mispronounce it grand guingold how do you say it?" "But Grand gingold I'm embarassed." "The french word." "I cannot pronounce grand guignol but I know what it means!" "There used to be a theater in Paris for many years, that would stage plays where there were murders and executions and battle scenes with explicit gore." "So the idea of the gore movie, or the gore piece has always been with us." "The key scene in Blood Feast, he reaches into a girls mouth and pulls out her tongue." "And that became that watershed scene that to this day has been, its, its the one that every film biographer who cares about this kind of movie singles out as the scene that changed the course of motion pictures." "The cultural impact of Blood Feast's excessive violence is debatable, but what is clear is the history of contemporary violence in American cinema owes a debt to different film that debuted three years before Blood Feast, was directed by the premiere film artist of his day and released by a major studio." "Well I think the movie would be the movie that changed violence was Psycho." "Everybody after that had the liberation to do what was in their minds based on the success and acceptence of Psycho." "In 1960, Alfred Hitchcock's Psycho was released." "Utilizing similar marketing tactics that would make The 40 Thieves proud, much of Psycho's success had to do with the advertising methods used to promote the film offering further proof that the distinction between Hollywood and exploitation films boils down to little more than" "the cost and quality of the individual productions." "So the question begs to be asked is there really much of a difference between these two films?" "Other than the fact that somebody using a knife on another person and they're both shot on a motion picture film, I don't see too many great similarities." "In terms of exploitation, I see great similarities between a film like Blood Feast and a movie like Psycho." "Hitchcock's film was pure ballyhoo." "I mean he had a brilliant marketing campain for that." "The entire motion picture indusry knows that" "Psycho is being exhibited a special presentation policy." "A creation of Paramount Pictures showmanship!" "Alfred Hitchcock when he makes Psycho, truly he wants every single person in America to see that movie." "I believe that his motivations are almost exactly the same as Friedman and Lewis." "What do these movies have in common?" "Quite a bit actually" "See the movie version that TV didn't dare show!" "Uncut!" "Intact!" "Alfred Hitchcock's Psycho" " Ballyhoo, PT Barnum you know." "It's all about getting the suckers in." "#THE TIMES..." "THEY ARE A CHANGIN'#" "As the 1960s ended, so would The Hollywood Production Code." "Spanning over thirty years and countless motion pictures, the views of The Production Code had clearly grown out of touch with the changing times and societal views." "In order to adapt, the studios introduced a new rating system." "This seal is a part of the self-regulation of the Motion Picture Association." "It means that the film displying this seal is within the creative boudries of reason and good judgment." "And that the theaters showing this film, supports the code" "And with the changes in the ratings system, came a new and expanded audience." "Orgy, orgy!" "Have an orgy!" "This period in American film history was the most exciting and liberating since the pre-Code era." "I blinked in 1965 and suddenly the 60s appeared." "When I left everybody had short hair, when I came back everybody had long hair, they were smoking dope, the Beatles had just played The Hollywood Bowl." "And everything changed overnight." "With the 1966 film The Wild Angels," "American International Pictures took the conventions of the previous decade's youth market films and embelished them with a contemporary view to reflect America's growing counter culture." "Just what is it that you want to do?" " Well we want to be free." "We want to be free to, to do what we want to do." "We want to be free to ride." "We want to be free to ride our machines without being hassled by The Man" "And then of course when the sixties came, there were some really intersting political movies." "All these movies about the youth generation." "Individual against the collective conforming society and all that." "And in these movies they condemn drugs, drugs are bad." "Unless you're in the movie and then they're pretty good!" "During this time, you would see drug movies everywhere." "There's nothing wrong with blowing a grass!" " Yeah!" "You can do it a thousand times and never go to harder drugs!" "I think, the only time I think I've ever been able to understand myself was on an acid trip." "So even outside of what you were getting in legitimate exploitation cinema, you were getting in your classroom." "If you become a pothead, you risk blowing the most important time of your life" "Im Peter Fonda." "We've just come back from making a movie, dealing with the most talked about sujects of the day;" "LSD" "Drugs were always around." "Psychadelics didn't really arrive until the late sixties even though there are little traces of psychadellia in The Tingler for instance." "Dave, that drug you brought?" " It's not a drug, it's an acid" "The trip he has in that movie is not that interesting to me" "The walls!" "The walls!" "The walls!" "The exploitation films produced for the youth market during the late sixties featured a mind-numbing array of anarchistic attitudes, sexual freedom, and graphic violence." "Not even the Godfather of Gore himself could resist the allure of a rumbling motorbike." "American International was making biker movies, but their biker movies were all of a pattern." "I thought we could brake that mold by having female bikers who in fact became dominant." "Man Eaters, get those ugly mothers!" "There's no question who ran the show in She Devils On Wheels." "And that's why its so funny when someone says some of my movies were sexist, that we take it all out on women and I say "Ever see She Devils on Wheels?"" "In 1969, inspired by the financial success of American International Picture's earlier biker movies, Columbia Pictures released Easy Rider." "A film that would eventually come to symbolize the era." "Easy Rider is a picture that exists because of exploitation pictures." "I don't think that itself it is, because I think it's a message movie." "It does not have a clear western like plot." "It's basically an odyssey." "America's growing opposition to the Vietnam War inspired a number of low budget filmmakers who sprang into action with their own responses." "The result was a handful of angry and nihilistic pictures that now depicted America's youth as victims." "Here's the first motion picture two offer, to the daring, a look into the final, maddening space between life and death." "The Last House On The Left." "To avoid fainting, keep repeating:" "Its only a movie;" "Only a movie" "You see Last House On The Left is interesting because it is so nasty." "I want you to take the gun." "And I want you to put in your mouth and I want you to blow your brains out!" "Blow your brains out!" "And just in your face sick." "That a studio would have never made that." "You would have never seen that in any way except exploitation." "Growing up in the sixties, nothing was holy anymore." "We were growing up as Americans and I think probably were experiencing our own history for the first time." "As the 1960s counter culture movement evolved and expanded, evil was no longer restricted to the conventions of low budget monster movies." "Now, in the wake of the Manson Family murders and Vietnam, the face of fear was human." "I wanted to poke your eyes out while you were feeling it in your gut." "Ya know." "And to cut your dick off while you were smelling roses." "With 1972's The Last House on The Left, Wes Craven used Swedish director" "Ingmar Bergman's The Virgin Spring as a source of inspiration for his first film and as an indirect response to an raging and unpopular war." "I had a subway car empty out on me once, when I was just sitting there." "And this was because all of the posters were up in the subway so God of course people were going to look at the posters and see me there with a fucking knife like this, ya' know and they're gonna go" "I gotta get outta here!" "Ya' know." "But even an exploitation film with a social message needs a bit of ballyhoo." "Last House's infamous marketing campaign proved successful, if not wholey original." "The promotional tagline "Its Only a Movie" had in fact alrady been used to market Herschel Gordon Lewis' "Color Me Blood Red" released 7 years earlier." "You must keep reminding yourself:" "It's just a movie;" "It's just a movie." "The counter culture movement of the late sixties had been immideitly proceeded and inspired by the Civil Rights Movement." "Even before the so-called black exploitation boom of the 1970s, low budget filmmakers had been quick to exploit racial tension in a series of politically charged potboilers, which often remain overlooked when re-counting the evolution of exploitation films." "Movies are reactionary, people don't understand that." "Movies are certainly infuential." "But the reality is, its called the business." "They want to sell tickets, so they will make anything" "Hitler Eats A Baby they will make anything, if it makes money." "#BLAXPLOITATION YOU DIG?" "#" "Shaft!" "Hotter than Bond." "Cooler than Bullit!" "They started making a lot of movies for a black audience." "To exploit The Civil Rights movement and the trouble in the country." "C'mon run!" "Run!" "Melvin Van Peebles, who was an avant garde artist and playwright;" "he made a movie called Sweet Sweetback's Baaaad Assss Song." "And it was made down and dirty." "It was made the same time I was making Schlock we shared equipment, I don't know if you knew that." "According to legend, only two theaters in America would agree to play 'Sweet Sweetback's Badasss Song." "On it's opening night in Detroit, the film broke theater attendance records and would eventually gross over 4 million dollars." "The film's success inspired both exploitation filmmakers and mainstream studios alike to make films that depicted inner city life from a black perspective." "At a time of racial division in America, inner city audiences rushed to the theaters to see movies that portrayed them in a heroic light." "Eventually the movie industry was forced to sit up and take notice." "And the era of the black hero had arrived" "Oooo, Super Fly!" "Success of the new notion picture Super Fly had brought Ron O'Neal to sudden nation wide attention." "Here he talks about how they made the film in which he takes the title role." "Above all I think we wanted to make a, a film that was realistic in content, realistic in nature." "A black man becomes a hustler, because he is forced into it or led into it by socio-economic force." "Because being a hustler is not a fun thing." "In the days of the chitlin circuit, where you'd make black westerns or whatever it was." "This suddenly, was for black and white audiences." "Hey, what kinda talk is that soul brother?" "Don't you know that black is beautiful?" " It was something to be proud of." "I mean to see the black audience seeing their super heros on screen." "It was just amazing." "It was just a great time for the black audience because we weren't used to seeing that." "Blaxploitation may have been popular among audiences of all colors, but some critics suggest that these films contributed to cultural stereotypes and, in some cases, even promoted reverse racism." "People criticized Coffy and Foxy Brown for being almost racist from the black point of view?" "And my feeling was well why not?" "We've been watching racist movies all our lives." "Why not see what it looked like from the other side and enjoy it." "And I thought it was fun." "One actor whose image transcended the characters associated with blaxploitation stereotypes was former AFL Defensive Back, Fred Williamson." "Never a pimp, never a pusher and always a hero." "Williamson's acting career went well beyond the exploitation market of the 1970s." "Damn brother, you have become one violent dude!" "What we needed at the time, were heroes." "We needed physical hereos." "We didn't need, we didn't need creative heroes, we didn't need actors." "We needed somebody saying:" "You spray that water on me" "If you put those dogs on me, I'm killin' them and when I'm done with them, I'm gonna kick your ass." "I don't do no singin;" "I don't do no dancing' and you aint kilin' me and" "I'm winning my fights and I'm gonna get that girl - that's it - bottom line." "People like movies about the wrong side of the law, so I didn't see that Black Caesar for example was anything different than Little Ceasar or Pulic Enemy." "When I was a kid, sometimes I liked the second features better than the first ones." "Those pictures meant more to me than the big lavish" "MGM movie that played as the main feature." "I liked the second feature better." "So I set out to make a couple of good second features." "Well known for his guerilla style filmmaking Larry Cohen's productions are notorious not only for their content but also for the bold and occasionally illegal ways in which they were made." "Larry Cohen is a shamless filmmaker." "It was shameless." "It was just to hear that certain audience on 42nd Street go Yeeeeeeah!" "From crowded Times Square to the LAX baggage claim, Cohen rarely if at all sought proper shooting permits to make his movies in public places." "I learned a lot from Larry Cohen." "I learned how to steal shots and how to do big scenes without permits." "When we did the scene in Black Ceasar when I get shot coming out of Tiffany's." "I'm going down the street and everybody they're slowing down and they're looking at me like they don't wanna be involved, who is this idiot down there?" "And they see blood." "Now for sure they don't want to be involved." "And then I went across the street and I fell on garbage can," "I fell up against the wall;" "and people just look at me." "Nobody, nobody came by." "Finally after all of this which they didn't get on film a cop came by and he says:" "Hammer, whachyou doin'?" "You shooting a movie here?" "You gotta a permit." "He said, I'm not asking." "I'm walking around the block." "I'll be back in 15 minutes." "Be gone." "I said, ok but would you mind moving over cause you're in my shot." "Just move over a little bit." "As this era drew to a close, many of the black exploitation films moved to parodies of the genre." "These films began to turn away from the social statements that had been incorporated early on and featured more outrageous storylines." "Hide your mamas." "Big brother is comin'." "Well, I feel two ways about it." "Its ashame that" "African American artists had this small window, into film." "That this was where the majority of African Americans got to work." "And they were all, sort of exploitation movies." "I think it was an incredibly creative time." "So." "I found that I had more freedom, within that context." "You see thats the other thing about exploitation." "If you deliver the elements of exploitation that's all they care about." "So you're not dealing with people who are cutting you and re-cutting you and casting, you know." "Bassically, he delivers the action, he delivers the nudity, he delivers the gunfight, the, the fist fights, the chases leave him alone." "Within the context of delivering the exploitation, you get to be incredibly free" "#THEY CAED THEIR BODIES..." "BUT NOT THEIR DESIRES#" "Women, locked behind walls of concrete and steel." "Guarded by barbed wire and guns in a tropical hell." "They call it:" "The Big Dollhouse" "In 1970, director Jack Hill made The Big Dollhouse." "Capitalizing on a decade of civil unrest, the Philippines set action'er transported the tride and true formula of women in prison films to an unnamed banana republic, where forced labor, prostitution and jungle warfare was the name of the game." "Well it was the first real big huge major hit of that type of movie, it wasn't the first film made on that subject matter." "Watch out for her, she likes to wrestle." "Women in prison films have been around a long time." "And those films are pretty sympathic towards women in prison." "Each day the crimal courts condemed scores of unfortunate girls to prisons that need reforming more than the prioners" "So when I got back to the states." "Everybody was really excited about the movie." "Which was great because when I read the script I thought it was just horrible" "I couldn't, I thought all God what am I going to do with this?" "Truthfully when you look at that movie now, it's very sophomoric." "Well, you don't look like a hardened ciminal to me" "I don't want to do things for Greer any more." "I'd like to do something for you." "And at the same time in a naïve way it was ahead of it's time," "The triumph of The Big Dollhouse was it's depiction of women not only as the central characters, but also the as aggressors." "Get it up, or I'll cut it off" "These women confronted Freudian complexities and shed the shackles of a male dominated society albeit while wearing minimal clothing and taking group showers." "Well, well, I have to say that I like naked sweaty women." "So I guess Women In Prison films, are, are." "I enjoy Women In Prison films." "I don't watch them frequently but if there was a Women In Prison film playing on 42nd st I'd make a point of seeing it." "Women like to watch other women naked and doing things." "I'm sorry, its something that women like." "Women don't have a problem with it." "Women like it." "Women get turned on by it too." "Wha, what?" "Well I wrote The Big Birdcage as a sequel to The Big Dollhouse." "And during the year after The Big Dollhouse came out it was so widely imitated everybody rushed out with copies of it and even on television and so the only thing I could do was to kinda do a spoof on it" "and to make fun of the genre in a way but still serious." "In The Big Birdcage, Hill turned the Women In Prison Film convention on its ear, by having his characters break into the prison and placing the caged women under the watchful eyes of gay prison guards." "Don't play coy with me missy, you don't have anything" "I would be interested in anyway" " Hi there, Rocco." "You big stud." "What's up?" " Nothing's up for you!" "We had talked about doing another sequel and I had the idea of a movie called" "The Pirate Women of Zambowanga, but the genre kinda cooled off and I didn't want to go back to the Philippines again." "#THE SCHLOCKY..." "SEVENTIES#" "The Corpse Grinders." "Do you know what this is?" "It's a corpse grinding machine." "I think that probably The Corpse Grinders is the most famous at least in this country." "Corpse Grinders was a big thing here in the United States." "The plot of the film was these two guys that decided that they wanted to make cat food and they couldn't get ingrediants." "Couldn't get enough grain and so on." "So they decided well cadavers." "Directed by Ted V. Mikels, The Corpse Grinders typifies the filmmaker's love for the absurd and ridiculous." "Completely devoid of any socio-political subtext of the time, most of the horror films from the 1970s reflected the true spirit of exploitation;" "if an audience is curious enough to see something outrageous, then there will always be someone to take the ticket." "A title like Corpse Grinders is something different, unusual." "The Indredible Two-Headed Transplant!" "Written by James Gordon White, The Incredible Two Headed Transplant mixed the element of carny freak show monstrosities and the Frankenstein mythos for modern horror audiences." "The Incredible Two Headed Transplant was really a send-up of Frankenstein." "At least that's what I thought, when I was writing it." "It was meant to be just a lite, little horror movie." "Yet everyone just seems to think it's just terrible." "People will sit through most movies." "No matter how shitty." "People will actually." "Well I'm here now!" "Dracula Versus Frankenstein!" "It'll get better." "We've been here an hour and a half, it will get better." "Most of the exploitation films of this era share one simple goal to entertain audiences and therefore, make a buck." "The motion picture industry has always prospered during times of social turmoil and the 1970s was no exception." "Americans will always look for an escape during dark days and storytellers like" "Mikels and White prove that the carnie spirit of exploitation will never change." "Overall my movies, I, I never wanted to make the great American movie." "I wanted to entertain and entertain myself while I was working on the script and then hopefully entertain an audience so when the saw the movie." "If you're going to entertain people you've got to grab their attention." "More spine tingling thrills." "More bone crusing terror, terror, terror..." "#SEND IN..." "THE NAZIS#" "The first phase of our operation will be to remove The Messiah" "Written by, co-produced and co-starring James Gordon White," "The Tormentors a Nazi versus Jesus action thriller is a rarely mentioned foray into the curious sub-genre of grindhouse cinema known as Nazi Exploitation." "You will have a hard time convincing a lot of people of the inherint Entertainment Value of Nazi Exploitation films." "The Nazi Exploitation movies to me, the image is of a semi-clad girl, tied to a post being whipped." "And although there was some of that in the 40s, it didn't really take off until the 60s and 70s." "As the years go on and the pictures get more and more graphic, you really start to get beyond any kind of concept of taste, whatsoever." "And the Nazis simply exist as a excuse to for images of horror and degradation, sex and murder." "So you cannot honestly say Don Edmonds was inspired to make an anti-Nazi film because of his strong political feelings." "Well that movie was a picture that I had been directing stuff." "Again, low budget stuff." "I would shoot, in those days you know rent was 85 bucks a month and I couldn't make it and I had balled tires on my car and no gasoline in it anyway so, you know." "Just a broke guy walking around Hollywood." "So I go into the Intercontinental Hotel on Sunset and here's this guy very distinguished with the grey hair with the thing and the suit and the thing and I meet him in the coffee shop and he says" "I'd like you to ah look at our film, you come highly recommended," "I've seen some of your other pictures." "I said 'sure'." "I went home and I read "Ilsa:" "She Wolf of The S.S."" "And I'm reading this thing." "this is the worst piece of SHIT I have ever read in my you know I'm going through." "I don't know if I can do this?" "I, I...nobody has ever done a film like this." "I've never seen one!" "Well I said that this is a terrible film." "You can't make it!" "Its a frontery to everything and man." "And I'm looking at this fucking money man and this guy is dealing cash..." "CASH!" "And then the total whore in me comes out." "There maybe some underlying things that we can that and I signed up." "Heil Hitler!" " Well you know in the ensuing time after" "I became this incredible whore and gonna do this movie." "I started looking at it like I bought the job, I gotta do it." "I said I'm gonna go balls out on this thing." "If I've never seen it, than the people have never seen it cause I've seen all this stuff" "I thought Don Edomond's Ilsa She Wolf of The S.S. was an amazing movie." "I thought the script was great." "I thought it was smart, it was inventive." "But after that, I thought that a lot of the films were uninspired and depressing." "Because, you know, there is only so much you can do with Nazis." "It's like Don Edmonds created the kind of" "Hogan's Heroes of Nazi Prison Camp Movies" "The otutlandish Hogan's Heroes spirit in Ilsa:" "She Wolf of The S.S should come as no surprise while viewing the film, it was in fact filmed on the same sets of the popular television series." "If you're going to be outrageous; be outrageous." "And I did." "#PORN-O-COPIA#" "By the 1970s, sex in grindhouse cinema had reached it's climax" "Clearly this was all leading up to pornography." "Right?" "And then it was like, well now that we can actually show sex everything changed." "And then it really became a question of now that you can see it, what is it that you want to see." "And the porn theaters were downtown and in grungy areas and you felt dirty going to 'em" "You gotta be kidding me?" "This is a dirty movie." "Do you wann see people happily making love on camera?" "Or do you still wanna see, the ugly stuff?" "The people making the films, the early porn films thought they were really doing something great." "They actually thought there was culturally very, very significant about what they were doing." "That they were liberating the culture from its stayed, old fashioned, puritan ethic." "That lasted only so long." "By the time of Deep Throat." "I mean that became a phenomenon where it was respectable almost." "I mean everybody went to see Deep Throat." "Lets watch Deep Throat." "No time to masterbate, we've got to fornicate." "With the wide theatrical release of Deep Throat in 1972, the business of soft core pornography had essentially ended." "The Amazing Transplant!" "While many producers from the classic era of sexploitation continued to produce for time, what they knew best, these filmmakers were eventually either forced to adapt or gracefully bow out of the game." "When Deep Throat opened, it was the gold rush." "Everybody who had access to a 35 mm camera both here on the West Coast and the East Coast were running out and making hardcore porn films, and making tons of money." "This is a culture for salesmen." "And that's what America is all about; the bottom line America is about making money." "Because anything that makes money is good." "It's American." "In the terms of the business, a profitable picture, is a good picture." "#THE FINAL GRIND ...OR IS IT?" "#" "And action!" " Gun doesn't work." " Cut!" "Upon the release of Jaws in 1975, the line between Hollywood blockbuster and drive-in second features had became blurred." "Exploitation and mainstream cinema had merged as the convetions of b-movie monster mayhem met with massive box office success." "What I've found is whether it's Warner Brothers, Paramount," "Universal, Fox, Columbia, they're going to steal from you." "I mean they're all pretty much equally dishonest, just some are more upfront than others." "Jaws was a phenomenon partly because it was a terrific movie and also because it was based on a big best seller and it had a tremendous release, you know advertising and lots of play dates." "It is really just a big budget version of The Creature From The Black Lagoon which even Steven Spielberg has admitted." "You make a studio picture and you have an oppurtunity with bigger budget and enough to you know hopefully make a better product." "But, it's the same business" "Following the astounding success of Jaws, low budget exploitation versions of" ""man versus animal" horror movies quickly flooded the market." "It was now the exploitation filmmakers who were looking to knock off and capitalize on the big studio films." "Pirannha was, unfortunately came two years after Jaws and right around the time that Jaws II was going to be released and it had ocurred to me that maybe it was a little late for a rip off of a picture that was two years old." "Roll 'em!" "I mean action, whatever I mean..." "A Los Angeles distributor of exploitation films named Frank Woods who owned a small film company, decided that he wanted to start making films himself and a friend of his had written a script about a giant alligator which" "I guess was to be a rip off of Jaws." "So I loved the idea, but the script was awful I agreed to do it if I could bring in John Sayles to re-write the script." "With the global success of Jaws, the major studios began to see b-movie concepts as a recipie for blockbusters" "That seems to have baded now, ya know." "They do, do come back every so often." "I think that the giant rabbit movie kind of put the kibash on some of it." "Now that audiences can see it all, what is there left to see?" "Have the traditional elements of exploitation gone away or have they simply evolved into acceptable mainstream entertainment?" "That was the best lovin' I ever had." "You're gonna wake up the rest of the bitches." "Now with such recent homages as Black Dynamite and Hell Ride." "The truth is clear, the spirt of grindhouse lives on." "Quentin Tarrantino and Robert Rodriguez made Grindhouse and I love the trailers in it." "But the only real grindhouse movie in the last, 10 or 15 years is The Passion of The Christ." "You know it was famously called Texas Chainsaw Jesus." "That movie was the rough house!" "That was a grindhouse movie." "It's all showbusiness." "It's all showbusiness, they're all in enertainment." "American Gangster is a very big budget film out now." "He's presented as a totally, admirable and charismatic he's Super Fly!" "And that, that, that's Black Exploitation picture." "Better made." "Bigger budget." "But the morality is the same." "Well I think there was something uniquely American about exploitation cinema." "You know a lot of these little movies were made for pennies." "But they were really striving for something and if that's not part of what America was all about, they I don't know what is?" "Movies, they're only a hundred years old little over a hundred years old but the movies have become our contemporary mythology." "And, the grindhouse is very much a part of that." "#AMERICAN GRINDHOUSE#"