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Pat Barrington in Schlock! The Secret History of American Movies (2001)

Reseñas de usuarios

Schlock! The Secret History of American Movies

14 reseñas
8/10

does a really good job of informing the viewer how and why exploitation movies became so popular

a good look at the whole exploitation phenomenon that began in the 50s. unlike "mau mau sex sex," this film does a really good job of informing the viewer how and why exploitation movies became so popular. it looks at social and political forces that guided the rise and demise of the industry. it looks at landmark films, directors and producers. and rather than focus just on their effect on exploitation films, it looks at their effect on mainstream films as well. if you want to know about exploitation films of the 50s and 60s, this is the documentary to check out. as one reviewer noted, many of the films mentioned are released by "something weird video," another label to explore is "troma" which has many similar titles. B+.
  • aptpupil79
  • 25 mar 2004
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7/10

Informative and Strange!

This documentary is loaded with fascinating clips and interviews with people involved with exploitation films of the 50's and 60's. Such people as Roger Corman, Doris Wishman, Harry Novack and others give insight into the making of horror, sex, and other low-budget movies that makes one wish that era was still around.

It's great to see a clip of the beautifully strange Pat Barrington in The Agony of Love (an interesting film you should check out). Someone should make a film of Ms. Barrington's life. Vampira even pops up here! I recommend this highly and have seen many of the films mentioned. Drive-in movies had a special quality of their own and it's a shame there are so few left in America.
  • shepardjessica
  • 26 jun 2004
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6/10

The Birth of the Independent Film and the Discovery of an Untapped Audience

Generally well-done, highly introspective detailing of the birth, evolution, rise, and demise of all those exploitation films of the fifties and sixties primarily. Ray Greene narrates, produces, and directs with obvious love for these films and those that made them. Along for informative interviews are Roger Corman, Samuel Arkoff, Harry Novak, David Friedman, and Doris Wishman. The film looks at the rise of these films in an almost clinical/historical approach. Greene tries to relate the film types - gore, nudie cutie, roadshow, etc... - within the historical context surrounding the times. While this undertaking might not seem all that complicated, the films and their distinctive types are legion. Greene does address most of them with enthusiasm and applicable film clips. It was very interesting hearing Corman and Dick Miller reminisce about some of their work in particular, and the documentary definitely got me excited about seeing some films I might not have otherwise seen. That is always a strength of any medium. The DVD has lots of very cool extras which include more interviews and even a weird short from a power company. I wish further examination had been explored into the 70s, perhaps the heyday of these films as far as I am concerned. And though the documentary has a distinct academic nature for a subject you would think could not lend itself to such treatment, everything provided is done so in a most entertaining way. If you love any of these films from the period, the documentary is definitely worth a look or two.
  • BaronBl00d
  • 6 ene 2006
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Interesting, if limited, overview of the Exploitation Cinema

No one documentary could reasonably encompass the full range of the Exploitation Cinema, though SCHLOCK! gives it a decent go. By focusing in on just a few key figures, Director Greene gives us some depth into their careers, but limits the overall breadth of the subject.

For those familiar with AIP & Roger Corman, the first section will probably contain nothing new. The dry, academic narration doesn't help matters. Countless articles, books and interviews with and by Corman and Sam Arkoff leave little room for anything fresh to be said. Some of their "discoveries" such as Peter Bogdanovich and Dick Miller also appear. The ID's on the clips are sketchy during this section as well (But improves for some reason during the rest of the film. The one glaring exception there is that the only example of early sexploitation in the cinema are excerpts from METROPOLIS of all things - AND, they're not ID'd).

The Documentary kicks into gear with the long middle section focusing on David Friedman, Doris Wishman and Harry Novak and the less well known Nudist, Nudie Cutie and Roughie Sexploitation era. Friedman too has made the rounds the past couple of decades, but he's the consummate showman. The Documentary springs to life whenever he's on screen. Though there is a brief afterword on the post-Sexploitation era, the Documentary seems to take the point-of-view that Exploitation cinema ended in the early 70's when mainstream Hollywood began making the pictures that these pioneers had been making for decades (an opinion oft echoed). This short-changes the period of Drive-In Exploitation cinema that flourished in the 70s' and then had a brief revival during the VCR boom of the 80's and early-90's (This despite the fact that Corman was and IS active throughout this latter period. The film dismisses Corman's post-AIP career in a few seconds).

A note on the DVD. The behind the scenes "tour" of Novak's studio/office is a fascinating peek at an era long-gone, and David Friedman shows off his best Carnival barker routine. Both pieces are fully worth the price of the DVD. In just the few years since this doc was made, the Cinema has lost both Doris Wishman and Samuel Z. Arkoff, making their inclusion here even more valuable.
  • gortx
  • 9 may 2006
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10/10

High weirdness about movies you never knew existed

An amazing movie! If you think you know the history of American cult and exploitation movies you don't unless you've watched this picture. Chronicles the whole history and development of exploitation and sexploitation flicks from the silent film days all the way to the end of the "golden era" in the early 1970s. Tons of fascinating and ultra-rare clips, everything from sexploitation cuties to cheesy but hilarious monsters from Mars. Loads of interviews with the famed (Roger Corman, Peter Bogdanovich, Forrie Ackerman, Vampira) to the notorious (Doris Wishman, Dave Friedman). I thought this movie was lots of fun and very informative, and the DVD has about four hours of really excellent extras too. An A - or maybe even an A picture about the world of B-movies.
  • machineart
  • 4 dic 2003
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10/10

It Really is "The Secret History..."

What a weird and revealing documentary this is! Lots of clips from old exploitation sci-fi and Russ Meyers-ish nudie movies, but with interviews and commentary that makes you stop laughing at the pictures and then start reflecting on them. A truly unique and evocative experience, and one that will be full of surprises for anyone who isn't already a big cult movie watcher.
  • machineart
  • 24 ene 2004
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10/10

Outstanding!

"Schlock" is a fascinating, feature length documentary about the "exploitation" films of the 50s and 60s and their lasting impact upon the film industry. It also provides an insightful look into what the word "exploitation" really means.

"Schlock" introduces the viewer to the world of art-house and grindhouse flicks, everything from Nudie Cuties and Roughies right up to the Gore of Herschell Gordon Lewis. Few of these films ever saw a major theatrical release, but nevertheless managed to lure in viewers by the thousands...and dollars by the millions, influencing a whole new generation of filmmakers including Francis Ford Coppola, Peter Bogdonovich and Sam Peckinpah. Among the interviewed are Roger Corman, the legendary Doris Wishman, Forrest Ackerman, Samuel Arkoff and Maila Nurmi, all of whom provide fascinating glimpses into a world of skin, sin and blood which not even the censors could stop.

Films featured and discussed include "The Defilers" "Bucket of Blood" "The Terror" "The Immoral Mr. Teas" "Carnival of Souls" "Kiss Me Quick" and "Bad Girls Go To Hell" to name only a few. The clips themselves are bright with candy colored lights and lots of healthy T&A, or dark with menacing shadows and splattered with blood. Either way, the viewing experience here is much like indulging in a rich feast, and is almost as good as seeing the original films themselves. From the lasting effects of World War 2, the threat of nuclear annihilation and the bloody upheaval of America in the 1960s, "Schlock" shows us the sometimes ugly, sometimes funny but always entertaining truth about the origins of these powerful films and their own lasting influence upon modern day Hollywood.

Absolutely engrossing!
  • Gafke
  • 24 jun 2004
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One of the Best Out There

Schlock! The Secret History of American Movies (2001)

**** (out of 4)

Only God himself knows how many documentaries I've seen on "B" movies because I've really lost count over the years. However, I do know this here is probably the best of the bunch as it sinks its teeth into the exploitation flicks of the 30's, the low-budget teenage films of the 50's and more explicit sexploitation films of the 60's. Roger Corman, Forrest J. Ackerman, Samuel Z. Arkoff, Peter Bogdanovich, Doris Wishman, David Friendman, Dick Miller, Harry Novak and even Vampira are interviewed among others. The documentary does a great job at telling how the studio system was bombing at the box office and the likes of Corman were making millions by spending very little. The doc also does a great job at showing how difficult it was to make these films with some of them coming in in just three days. Clips from various classics are shown as well.
  • Michael_Elliott
  • 25 feb 2008
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10/10

Weird Stuff Well Presented

I saw this with my boyfriend. A real freakshow! COol weird movies from the

vaults -- stuff I never knew exiosted. I especially liked VAMPIRA. What a sexy beast! 10 plus - a movie you have to see it to believe it. There are movies in here with rubber head monster like "Mystery Science" and movies with naked

chicks with beehive hairdos plus lots of interviews with people who made the

movies or else were in them. I had never seen a single one of these films

before. My boyfriend says I should also mention: DOrris Wishman, David F.

Freeman... Here you write it : )

Okay. Snarker here. I love this movie. I am a big fan of "bad film" and cult

moviemaking. I can't believe all the people who were important to B-movies

from the 50s and 60s that they got into this film. The DVD extras alone are worth the 20 bucks.
  • film_410
  • 25 feb 2004
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8/10

Enjoyable and informative

  • Woodyanders
  • 2 jul 2019
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8/10

Interesting Doc About the Underbelly of American Filmmaking

This was a documentary that I discovered through seeking out other ones with similar subject matter. I believe this was a recommended to me from watching American Grindhouse. It does interview and feature similar people from that one. It also went out to get others that were not featured there as well, which made me happy to see. I watched this at work and treated it like a video podcast.

What I think this one does better is truly give us the history of exploitation cinema. It is funny, it starts off asking that question and Roger Corman does his best to answer it. He gives 2 answers, then states that it is probably something in the middle. Something interesting here is that the breaking of the monopoly for the major studios with the theaters gave life to this sub section of films. We learn about how these started as cautionary tales that had to be creative with how it was presented to avoid censorship. They also credit the horror host, Vampira aka Maila Nurmi, who was one of the first to show low budget horror films on television. We then learn more about the evolution of these from nudist to nudie-cuties and then into other sets of films that would come out after that.

I'm glad that they got legends like Corman, Dick Miller, Nurmi and Peter Bogdanovich to talk about their time, whoever brief it was in films like this. They also talk to greats like David F. Friedman, Samuel Z. Arkoff, Harry H. Novak and Doris Wishman, who are legends in these types of films, just maybe not known by the mainstream. It is also a good touch to interview historians like F. X. Feeney, Michal Copner, Forrest J. Ackerman, Joseph McBride and Michael J. Bowen. Their insight and knowledge help to frames things as well as discussing their cultural impact on the mainstream or what came after.

I'd say that this is a well-made documentary. I like the information presented. Then taking footage, editing it in so to give us a better idea of what they're talking about was a good touch. It doesn't feel like they rushed through things, which makes me appreciate this doc more than others I've seen lately. I thought this was intriguing with what it does and helps to understand the underbelly of filmmaking a bit more. I'd recommend it to fans of movies like this.

My Rating: 8 out of 10.
  • Reviews_of_the_Dead
  • 12 jun 2024
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9/10

A slice of important cinema history rarely mentioned

Most historical documentaries on cinema and movie history completely skip the side of exploitation movies. Here their history and significance along with the major producers and directors is brought to the forefront. Included are the nudist movies, sexploitation and later roughies. I won't say these were the greatest movies but they did have significance and brought about major changes to Cinema. This documentary does leave it to you whether those changes were good or bad.

Roger Corman, David Friedman and even Doris Wishman among others are interviewed. There are a few other documentaries that cover this area of film but this is one of the few that we get to hear from the creative forces behind the movies. We also learn about the business side which played of course a big role.

Even if you are not a fan of these kind of movies, this is a very interesting part of cinema history. Check it out!
  • Musicianmagic
  • 10 ene 2024
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Well, Not All That Secret

It says a lot about my movie collection that I could identify the movie before it was mentioned, and I own the vast majority of them. This probably wasn't meant to be a promotional piece for Something Weird Video, but if you like the movies talked about in this excellent documentary, the vast majority are available from SWV.
  • garland-schaefers
  • 10 ene 2004
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