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Synopsis

With Boin-n-g!, HERSCHELL GORDON LEWIS bode farewell to the nudie-cuties via this semi-autobiographical comedy filled with sty comments on the sexploitation industry and those who populate it.

Suffering through a double-bill of The Adventures of Lucky Pierre and Nature’s Playmates at the Studio Theatre, best buddies Al Harding and Bob Stevens decide they could do better and, just like that, enter the nudie film business. After overcoming the initial tribulations of hiring equipment and finding the right girls, they rent out a country cottage for the weekend and begin work on their epic, “Nature’s Nudniks.”

What sets Boin-n-g! apart from the already overcrowded nudie-cutie scene at the time are the genuinely likeable performances from the two male leads who exhibit a strong comic chemistry between them. This is one of the best roles Bill Kerwin ever played for Herschell, and Robbie Bee is also good as Schmurtz, constantly bragging about his experiences with “Rock,” “Charlton,” and “C.B.” And, as always, the original organ score by Lewis is an absolute pearler. —Reel Wild Cinema

Director

Original

Herschell Gordon Lewis

Herschell Gordon Lewis was born in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, in 1929. After attending grade school, Lewis received a Master’s degree in Journalism at Northwestern University in Evanston, Illinois. A few years later, he became a professor of English literature at Mississippi State College. He was lured from his teaching career to be manager of WRAC Radio in Racine, Wisconsin, then to become a studio director at WKY-TV in Oklahoma City. In 1953, he settled in Chicago and began working for a friend’s advertising agency while teaching graduate advertising courses at night at Roosevelt University. In the meantime, he began directing commercial advertisements for a production company called Alexander and Associates. Lewis later bought out half of the company with business associate Martin Schmidhofer and renamed it Lewis and Martin Films. In 1960 he decided to go into the filmmaking business and produced The Prime Time (1960), which he made with his own money. It was profitable, so he next… read more

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