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The 1960s and 1970s marked the rise of exploitation-style independent B movies; films which were mostly made without the support of Hollywood's major film studios.As censorship pressures lifted in the early 1960s, the low-budget end of the American motion picture industry increasingly incorporated the sort of sexual and violent elements long associated with so-called ‘exploitation’ films.
Memories Within Miss Aggie is a 1974 American pornographic film directed by Gerard Damiano and starring Deborah Ashira, Eric Edwards, Harry Reems and Darby Lloyd Rains.The film pays homage to both Damiano's previous skin flick The Devil in Miss Jones and Alfred Hitchcock's Psycho.
Theatrical release poster for the 1969 Argentine film Éxtasis tropical, starring Isabel Sarli, one of the biggest stars of the sexploitation genre. [1] [2]A sexploitation film (or sex-exploitation film) is a class of independently produced, low-budget [3] feature film that is generally associated with the 1960s [4] and early 1970s, and that serves largely as a vehicle for the exhibition of ...
West, in "Maxxxine," applies his genre-movie scholasticism to a form that seems, on the face of it, to be the definition of disreputable: the '80s sexploitation thriller — the kind of badly lit ...
Nazis carrying female captives through Finland. A gold prospector who happens to be a super-killer. "Sisu" could have been so much more fun.
Actionploitation: Parody of 70s and 80s action films, usually a high-octane power fantasy that features macho pride, low-brow humor, cringe humor, bumbling and screwball buddy cops, martial arts, western boxing or street fighting, exaggerated rapport and/or bonding between villain and protagonist, intermittent melodrama and romance, plot ...
The Boston Globe called it a "stupid little movie... nothing more than a smirking skin flick". [7] The Pittsburgh Press said "what would have been tedious as half-hour TV drama has been padded to 93 minutes." [8] Spinning Image said "Part dreadful warning to the squares, part invitation to the hippies, this was of its time, shall we say." [9]
Snuff is a 1976 splatter film directed by Michael Findlay and Horacio Fredriksson. [2] Originally an exploitation film loosely based on the 1969 murders committed by the Manson Family, it is most notorious for being falsely marketed as if it were an actual snuff film.