Auf der Suche nach Rache infiltrieren Officer Angel Wolfe, ihre indianische Freundin Whitestar und Outlaw Heather eine befestigte Insel, auf der ein untoter Zauberer und seine böse Kulttrupp... Alles lesenAuf der Suche nach Rache infiltrieren Officer Angel Wolfe, ihre indianische Freundin Whitestar und Outlaw Heather eine befestigte Insel, auf der ein untoter Zauberer und seine böse Kulttruppe Frauen gefangen nahmen, um an Gladiatorenturnieren teilzunehmen.Auf der Suche nach Rache infiltrieren Officer Angel Wolfe, ihre indianische Freundin Whitestar und Outlaw Heather eine befestigte Insel, auf der ein untoter Zauberer und seine böse Kulttruppe Frauen gefangen nahmen, um an Gladiatorenturnieren teilzunehmen.
- Koro
- (as Bob Tessier)
- Prison Referee
- (as Annie Gaybis)
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After the credits have rolled, Wynorski sets up the plot: before they were vanquished, a forgotten civilisation called the Lemurians hid secrets of their super-science in two jewels - the Eyes of Avatar - which were separated during the war. Now, whoever brings the stones together again will rule with absolute power, and guess what?... an evil genius called Sin Do (Angus Scrimm) is planning to do just that!
Seeking revenge for the death of her brother (one of the cops killed in the opening scene), beautiful and buxom (natch) blonde Angel Wolfe (Melanie Vincz) teams up with massive-mammaried native American Whitestar (Raven De La Croix) and jailbird-with-big-jugs Heather McClure (Angela Aames) to enter a competition held at Sin Do's island fortress, the tyrant intending to build an army of trained assassins.
Like a cross between Charlie's Angels, a Russ Meyer movie and Enter The Dragon, this deliberately trashy exercise in silliness sees Wynorski packing in as much exploitative content as possible in his scant 83 minute run-time: ninjas, native American mysticism, a women's prison catfight (that turns into a mudbath), a shower scene, a robot tarantula, bad sword-fights, a pet gorilla (of the man-in-a-suit variety), a powerful phallic laser weapon, and, of course, lots of gazongas.
It goes without saying that it's all very low-brow, and with an obviously tight budget, extremely cheap looking at times (there's a really bad matte painting and Angus Scrimm's skeletal make-up at the end is little more than a rubber mask), but it is quite a lot of fun. Wynorski's stuck to his guns over the years, with countless 'fully loaded' films featuring well-endowed women, but this is still one of the better ones.
6.5/10, generously rounded up to 7 for IMDb.
Anything interesting? Sorry, no.
If You like well endowed women working it out and also save the world by hunting down some evil men, this is the movie for You.
Otherwise: don´t watch it, because a worst plot featuring silly characters acting in strange scenes won´t entertain You at all.
The story hits the ground running: tough female cop Angel Wolfe (lovely Melanie Vincz) loses her brother Rob (Bill Thornbury of the "Phantasm" series), who's also a cop, to a trio of deadly ninja types in a bungled robbery. When Rob produces a throwing star kind of weapon left at the scene, it leads Angels' FBI agent boyfriend Rick (Paul Coufos) to believe a religious cult head named Dr. Sin Do could be involved. He knows that Sin Do recruits young women in groups of three to be trained as assassins, so Angel gathers together two of her friends - the Indian warrior Whitestar (Raven De La Croix) and bubbly blonde jailbird Heather McClure (Angela Aames) so that they can infiltrate the madmans' remote island fortress.
There's a delightful cheesy charm to these proceedings, complete with some really fun looking sets and lots of animation effects. The dialogue is amusing, especially when spoken by De La Croix (also the associate producer and designer of her characters' costume); she has a fair number of truly groan inducing one liners to deliver. The colourful lighting is courtesy of Jacques Haitkin ("A Nightmare on Elm Street" '84) and the catchy score by Alan Howarth is reminiscent of the other work he did with John Carpenter in the 1980s.
Wynorski obviously had a lot of fun in the casting decisions: "Phantasm" series villain Angus Scrimm is our nefarious bad guy (although he doesn't show his face until well into the movie), notable screen tough guy Robert Tessier plays Koro, and Blackie Dammett ("National Lampoons' Class Reunion") is the sleazy Prager; there are also cameos for the great Kenneth Tobey (using his character name from "The Thing from Another World"), Linda Shayne (who co-wrote "Screwballs" with Wynorski), and Angelique Pettyjohn ('Get Smart', "Repo Man").
People who adore the wacky side of low budget cinema will likely adore "The Lost Empire" for its spirit and energy...and, of course, the assets of its actresses.
Eight out of 10.
Wusstest du schon
- WissenswertesRaven De La Croix designed the outfits that she wears in this film.
- PatzerKoro's eyebrows alternate between being bushy and shaved.
- Zitate
Dr. Sin Do: Ahhhh blood, My favorite wine!
- VerbindungenEdited from Derek Flint schickt seine Leiche (1966)
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Details
- Erscheinungsdatum
- Herkunftsland
- Sprache
- Auch bekannt als
- El imperio perdido
- Drehorte
- Downtown, Los Angeles, Kalifornien, USA(opening scenes & prison shower location)
- Produktionsfirma
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