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99 Women

Der heiße Tod

Spain, United Kingdom, Italy, Liechtenstein, West Germany

1969

86 Min
Color
1.66:1
English
  • Currently 3.2/5 Stars.
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DIR Jesús Franco

PROD Harry Alan Towers

SCR Milo G. Cuccia, Carlo Fadda, Jesús Franco

DP Manuel Merino

CAST Maria Schell, Herbert Lom, Mercedes McCambridge, Maria Rohm, Rosalba Neri, Luciana Paluzzi, Elisa Montés, Valentina Godoy, José María Blanco

ED Stanley Frazen

PROD DES Santiago Ontañón

MUSIC Bruno Nicolai

Synopsis

Jesus Franco’s campy women’s prison film. Mercedes McCambridge is unintentionally hilarious as sadistic lesbian warden Thelma Diaz, spitting tacky dialogue with exuberant venom in a performance so overbearing that it verges on classic. The plot is standard for the genre, as three women (Maria Rohm, Elisa Montes, Luciana Paluzzi) are sentenced to an island prison off the Panamanian coast, only to encounter torture, rape, and lesbianism. When sympathetic Warden Caroll (Maria Schell) replaces Diaz, the prisoners assume that conditions will improve, but their agony only worsens until they decide to escape. Rosalba Neri co-stars, and Herbert Lom runs the corrupt men’s prison nearby. 99 Women was heavily censored in various prints, with versions running anywhere between 70 and 108 minutes. Edits running 84, 86, and 94 minutes are most commonly available.

Director

Original

Jesús Franco

He was only 6 years old when he started composing music under the protection of his brother Enrique. After the Spanish Civil War, he was able to continue his studies at the Real Conservatorio de Madrid, where he finished piano and harmony. Being a Bachelor of Law and a easy-read novel writer (under the pseudonym David Khume), he signed on to enter the Instituto de Investigaciones y Experiencias Cinematográicas (IIEC), where he was only for two years, while he worked simultaneously as a director and theatre actor. Later, he went to Paris to study directing techniques at the I.D.H.E.C. (University of Sorbonne), where he used to go into seclusion during hours to watch films at the film archive. Back to Spain, he started his huge cinematographic work as a composer, with Cómicos (1954) and El hombre que viajaba despacito (1957), and later worked as an assistant director to Juan Antonio Bardem, León Klimovsky, Luis Saslavsky, Julio Bracho, Fernando Soler and Joaquín Luis Romero Marchent… read more

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