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Female Prisoner Scorpion: #701's Grudge Song (女囚さそり 701号怨み節, Joshū Sasori - 701 Gō Urami Bushi) is a women in prison film made by Toei Company in 1973. The fourth, and last in the first Female Prisoner Scorpion series, Meiko Kaji returned to play the title role, but director Shunya Itō was replaced by Yasuharu Hasebe .
Women in Cages; Women in Cell Block 7; Women in Cellblock 9; Women in Chains; Women of Devil's Island; Women Prison; Women Without Men (1956 film) Women Without Names (1940 film) Women's Prison (1955 film) Women's Prison Massacre
Miss Dice asks Laurie rhetorically, revealing she knew about what Kay and her people had done to her and the reason Laurie had gotten herself imprisoned. "You have the rest of your life to think about that." The scene then cuts to the movie's final shot, showing Laurie being picked up from prison by her boyfriend and now living life as a free ...
She is then apprehended and taken to the clinic. Outside, the inmates are picking apples where Maggie fakes a medical accident. She assaults an officer and steals a prison transport truck where Jacqueline hitches in. They take the truck to an auto repair shop, where the mechanic helps the women to escape after an officer spots the truck.
Girls in Prison is a 1956 American sexploitation women in prison drama film about a young woman who is convicted of being an accomplice to a bank robbery and is sent to an all-female prison. The film was directed by Edward L. Cahn , and stars Richard Denning , Joan Taylor , and Mae Marsh .
The women in prison film (or WiP film) is a subgenre of exploitation film that began in the early 20th century and continues to the present day. [1]Their stories feature imprisoned women who are subjected to sexual and physical abuse, typically by sadistic male or female prison wardens, guards and other inmates.
Scorpion's Revenge (also known as Sasori in U.S.A.) is a 1997 Japanese women in prison film directed by Daisuke Goto, and starring Yoko Saito, Shizuka Ochi and Tetta Sugimoto. The film was a Japanese/American co-production and was mostly filmed in Los Angeles, California.
Lust for Freedom is a 1987 "women in prison" film directed, produced and co-written by Eric Louzil, and starring Melanie Coll. The film was originally shot at a cost of $50,000 in 1985, under the title of Georgia County Lock-up. In 1986, Troma Team provided $125,000 to alter the film for a theatrical release.