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Biker Queen and four of her friends arrive in the deserted town with the Bartender, ignoring the dead bodies as they look for Bozo and cross paths with Slasher, his wife Secrets and the man she has an affair with, Greg. The group is attacked by a monster, which kills one of the biker girls, Tot Girl.
Harvey Lembeck also did a parody of Marlon Brando from The Wild One as the bumbling leader of the inept Rat Pack motorcycle gang in six Beach Party films: Beach Party (1963), Bikini Beach and Pajama Party (both 1964), Beach Blanket Bingo and How to Stuff a Wild Bikini (both 1965), and The Ghost in the Invisible Bikini (1966).
Biker Queen is finally able to get the bus started, and as they leave, Tat Girl sets Hobo and a monster on fire, who then fall out of the back of the bus. The bus emerges from underground with Biker Queen and Tat Girl intending to abandon the remaining survivors; however, the bus dies just as the other survivors catch up.
It stars Jeremy Slate, Adam Roarke, and Jocelyn Lane and is a biker film, a subgenre of exploitation films. The film was shot around Tucson, Arizona. [1] The film was later released on DVD by MGM Home Entertainment as a double feature with The Wild Angels. In the film, a biker attempts to retrieve his stolen motorbike from a motorcycle gang. He ...
Many rally girls end up traveling throughout the U.S. to work at several different rallies such as Daytona’s bike fest, Laconia Motorcycle Week, and Galveston, Texas’ Lone Star rally.
The film is about a trio of hillbilly girls who take on a biker gang over moonshine. [4] [5] The story line is basically about female bootleggers taking on a biker gang which is led by a typical bad biker called Teach. [6] They have to also deal with federal agent (played by Casey Kasem) who has been sent to the area to close the whiskey ...
She-Devils on Wheels is a 1968 American exploitation biker film about an all-female motorcycle gang called The Man-Eaters, directed and produced by Herschell Gordon Lewis. [2] Actual female motorcycle club members were cast for the film, who were from the Iron Cross motorcycle club's Cut-Throats Division.
Dobyns and Maguire both described the "biker girls" as women of low self-esteem whose sense of self-worth was only measured in terms of being associated with the Hells Angels. [108] As such, the "biker girls" were willing to endure any abuse from their boyfriends/husbands as the price of being associated with the Angels. [108]
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