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La justicière

Titre original : Lust for Freedom
  • 1987
  • R
  • 1h 32m
ÉVALUATION IMDb
3,8/10
639
MA NOTE
La justicière (1987)
A former female cop is framed by corrupt police, acting in collusion with the local judge, and has to fight her way out of the pen, alone, against tough inmates, and the people in charge.
Liretrailer1:17
1 vidéo
75 photos
B-MesureCriminalitéDrameMesureThriller

Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueA former female cop is framed by corrupt police, acting in collusion with the local judge, and has to fight her way out of the pen, alone, against tough inmates, and the people in charge.A former female cop is framed by corrupt police, acting in collusion with the local judge, and has to fight her way out of the pen, alone, against tough inmates, and the people in charge.A former female cop is framed by corrupt police, acting in collusion with the local judge, and has to fight her way out of the pen, alone, against tough inmates, and the people in charge.

  • Director
    • Eric Louzil
  • Writers
    • Craig Kusaba
    • Duke Howard
    • Eric Louzil
  • Stars
    • Melanie Coll
    • William J. Kulzer
    • Judi Trevor
  • Voir l’information sur la production à IMDbPro
  • ÉVALUATION IMDb
    3,8/10
    639
    MA NOTE
    • Director
      • Eric Louzil
    • Writers
      • Craig Kusaba
      • Duke Howard
      • Eric Louzil
    • Stars
      • Melanie Coll
      • William J. Kulzer
      • Judi Trevor
    • 13Commentaires d'utilisateurs
    • 34Commentaires de critiques
  • Voir l’information sur la production à IMDbPro
  • Vidéos1

    Trailer
    Trailer 1:17
    Trailer

    Photos75

    Voir l’affiche
    Voir l’affiche
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    Voir l’affiche
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    + 70
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    Rôles principaux76

    Modifier
    Melanie Coll
    • Gillian Kaites
    William J. Kulzer
    • Sheriff Coale
    Judi Trevor
    • Ms. Pusker
    Howard Knight
    • Warden Maxwell
    Elizabeth Carlisle
    • Vicky
    Dee Booher
    • Big Eddie
    • (as Dee 'Queen Kong' Booher)
    John Tallman
    • Jud
    Rob Rosen
    • Pete Andrews
    Shea Porter
    • Scruggs
    Donna Lederer
    • Donna
    Rick Crews
    • J.T.
    Elizabeth Carroll
    • Sharon Clarke
    Lor Stickel
    • Warren Clarke
    Joan Tixei
    • Evelyn Clarke
    Raymond Oceans
    • Petey
    Dana Palmer
    • Susan Williams
    Richard Vega
    • Bill Collins
    Amy Lyndon
    Amy Lyndon
    • Mary Robinson
    • Director
      • Eric Louzil
    • Writers
      • Craig Kusaba
      • Duke Howard
      • Eric Louzil
    • Tous les acteurs et membres de l'équipe
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Commentaires des utilisateurs13

    3,8639
    1
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    10

    Avis en vedette

    1Koli

    Absolutely dire

    There may be messages here about the importance of freedom, but they were lost amid guffaws prompted by the abysmal quality of this movie. The screenplay was awful, the acting for the most part dreadful, the editing appalling.

    Melanie Coll is marginally better than most in the film, but hers is hardly a sparkling performance. Many of the rest of the cast appear to be enthusiastic amateurs.

    It appears that the censors have forced cuts to the version put on to DVD in the UK in 2004, probably because of excessive violence. But the cuts were made with sheep shears rather than anything sharper, so the viewer is left wondering how the action has moved on so quickly and inexplicably.

    Don't waste 90 minutes of your life on this garbage.
    KGB-Greece-Patras

    A must for exploitation fans

    Well, let me say that this Troma feature is unlike everything I have seen, an a-typical Troma. This is actually meant to be a lot more serious that the average Troma, and it works fine as a decent semi-exploitation film. I am a fan of Troma films but not really an exploitation enthousiast. The acting is pretty decent. Humorous moments are not a lot, actually they are quite a few. There is some nudity (after all you 're watching a woman-in-prison film...) and a generous amount of violence and sadism. I don't really recommend you to watch it expecting much fun, and if you are looking for casual Troma weirdness & fun, you won't find too much.

    Exploitation / woman-in-prison flick enthousiasts , this is a must to discover!!!! You are sure to enjoy it much more than I did.
    8BA_Harrison

    An entertaining W.I.P flick from Troma.

    This Troma Women In Prison film ticks all of the genre boxes and then some. It takes a while to get going, kicking into gear at about the half-hour mark with the obligatory shower scene, after which it's non-stop trash and sleaze all the way, making it hugely entertaining for fans of exploitation cinema.

    Melanie Coll stars as Gillian Kaites, a former undercover cop who is framed by a corrupt sheriff, finding herself thrown behind bars at a women's correctional facility where the warden and staff use the inmates for their own perverted pleasures and to line their pockets.

    Here's a quick rundown of some of the delights on offer…

    Catfights, including a no-holds-barred wrestling match to the death.

    Full frontal nudity, most notably from '80s scream queen Michelle Bauer.

    A flogging/lesbian sex/rape montage, set to a heavy rock song.

    Seedy warden Maxwell (Howard Knight) making snuff movies.

    Scar-faced psycho Indian Jud (John Tallman) forcing himself upon innocent inmate Sharon (Elizabeth Carroll).

    Elderly white slaver Doc Bass (George Engelson) leering over 17-year-old hottie Holly (Terri Beck).

    Jud killing a couple on the highway, setting fire to the man and forcing the woman to crash her car (which explodes).

    A violent breakout in which Gillian blasts the deserving guards and warden with a machine gun (resulting in lots of blood!).

    High art it most certainly isn't, but for those with a taste for the outrageous, Lust For Freedom is well worth tracking down. I rate it 7.5 out of 10, rounded up to 8 for IMDb.
    4CrimsonRaptor

    Cuffs, Chaos, and Questionable Choices 🔗👀🚨

    Lust for Freedom lands squarely in the low-rent world of 1980s exploitation cinema, bathed in sleaze and saturated with the aesthetic of a late-night cable fever dream. It flirts with the rebellious tone of grindhouse prison flicks, but its attempts at empowerment feel shallow, almost accidental. There's a grimy atmosphere that lingers, not from tension or danger, but from a lack of polish. The cinematography veers between basic and barely functional, with flat lighting, jarring edits, and a handheld style that feels more like necessity than intention. The film never cultivates suspense or urgency; instead, it ambles from scene to scene with a kind of tired shrug.

    Performances are exactly what you might expect from a cast assembled more for their willingness than their experience. Judi Trevor, in the lead role, delivers a performance that wobbles between wooden and wildly overdone. She tries to bring fire to her character's struggle, but too often it gets buried under stiff line readings and melodramatic reactions. However, Elizabeth Carlson manages to stand out, even in a supporting role. There's a raw energy in her delivery, a glint of self-awareness that suggests she understood the absurdity of the material and leaned into it just enough to make her scenes feel alive.

    Despite its efforts to frame a story of resistance against systemic abuse, the film never quite transcends its base instincts. It wants to be angry, even revolutionary, but can't stop ogling its own characters long enough to build real substance. The prison setting lacks grit or believability; it feels more like a set dressed with props from a discount surplus store. The soundtrack doesn't help either, often clashing with the tone or simply feeling out of place.

    What Lust for Freedom does capture, if accidentally, is a kind of cultural snapshot. There's a chaotic energy, a sleazy optimism, that could only exist in a very specific kind of 1987. But that's not quite enough to save it from its own misfires.
    2Clockwork-Avacado

    Welcome to the Eighties...

    A film that sums up the eighties more than this, it would be hard to find. Pulsing synthesiser soundtrack, non-stop, screaming rock and roll, no-plot, aimless violence, total lack of any decent characters, and yes…very few real actors. It's a cheap, low-budget, sensationalistic thrill-ride, set in a woman's correctional facility. It's a Troma movie, the hallmark of absolute garbage, and yes, it's a well-earned reputation. This is a terrible, tacky work of zero-budget sexploitation, only with very little in the way of interest.

    The story drags its' heels over just under ninety minutes, with Melanie Coll as a policewoman who gets captured by a crooked cop of an even more crooked city of flesh-peddlers, and generally unpleasant characters. However, things are surprisingly dull; it's not exactly the "Hell on Earth" that it could have been. Coll just sits about in prison for most of the entire film, looking at other people having a hard time. Her dull, gaping performance is nothing special, yet the voice-over she provides manages to make a really bad film seem even worse, along the lines of Harrison Ford's drudge-like tones pasted on top of Scott's "Blade Runner". To be fair, unlike budget-eating Ridley Scott, most of this is because the entire movie has been shot silently to save money, with most of the dialogue added in in post-production, often in totally no relation to their lip-movements.

    The other stylistically rather irritating thing about this film is, it has been hacked-about considerably – this 82-minute version has endless jumps in in it, which, when you're watching a piece of very unsubtle exploitation, is frustrating, because you end up with all the dull bits, without any of the cheap thrills. However, there's still a couple of rather memorable moments, mainly a very lovingly filmed lesbian sex scene between "Crystal Breeze" and Michelle Bauer, and a disconcertingly well-choreographed wrestling scene between Dee "Queen Kong" Booher, and Elizabeth Carlisle. Worth a mention, definitely, is Elizabeth Carlisle's performance as the feisty bad-girl, Vicky, who gives a decent account of herself, in a rather over-the-top fashion, which is nonetheless entertaining.

    Equally over the top, is Judi Trevor's "Miss Pusker", a fierce faced prison warden, who is referred to at one point as being "Like something from a bad movie?" Do I hear anyone disagree with this? Nah. Her interrogation scenes with Amy Lyndon, are something of a highlight, and some of the few scenes which don't appear to be too heavily cut about.

    Main baddie Jud, a big Native American, is physically impressive as a creepy nutcase, but to be honest, in a Troma movie, it isn't hard to act like this. In fact, there's a car chase scene in this which seems to have come straight from Tarrantino's "Death Proof". In fact, I'm sure Mr. Q T would love this kind of movie, the sort of thing which "Death Proof" is a tribute to in the first place.

    The ending is a ridiculous confusion of shouting, and people being shot, but to be fair, we've all kind of given up by this point, crushed under the weight of that god-awful theme song, as well as the "Rock You to Death", theme song. God, turn off the rock! Not only that, it's about twice the volume of the dialogue, which means you'll have to do a lot of fiddling about with the volume. Or, just mute it every time the music kicks in. Makes me wish they'd just stuck to the synthesisers in the start of the movie.

    Overall, then, this is a movie which you are never supposed to judge as an art piece. It's just a piece of cheap exploitation, albeit a very heavily edited one with just a couple of decent scenes in it. Even as a "woman in prison" movie, a notorious sub-genre, it kind of fails, because there's so many scenes of literally nothing at all happening, with slow dialogue scenes in offices, no matter how sleazy and sensationalistic the DVD cover art tries to make it look. It's just a prime slice of the eighties, where everything was just so very loud, cheap and silly. Thre's a few really creepy, sordid moments, which hinge on the deeply disturbing side, but there is no denying that it does have a handful of relatively enjoyably exploitation moments, especially the longing close-ups in the Breeze/Bauer sex scene, which kind of makes you wish there's deen a lot more of this, than Coll just moping about doing nothing whatsoever. It's not a total waste of 82 minutes of your life, just maybe a very poor use of about seventy of them. Worth a watch, but be prepared to have to sift through a lot of crap, in order to get to the better bits.

    But, in the wake of recent mainstream cinematic events, it is worth pointing out that this movie actually does pass the much-demonised "Bechdel" test: there are about a dozen women characters, at least half of whom have names, most have dialogue. They all talk to each other, and definitely about something other than men. So, does that mean this is a feminist approved movie? I'd love to show the cover of this movie to a feminist, and say to them, "This passes the Bechdel test."(Personally don't really care that much about the ruling, because what difference does that make? Movies with no women in them are generally rather dull. But I'm sure you know that already. Or else, why would you be reading this?)

    Intérêts connexes

    Mathew Karedas in Le samurai de Los Angeles (1991)
    B-Mesure
    James Gandolfini, Edie Falco, Sharon Angela, Max Casella, Dan Grimaldi, Joe Perrino, Donna Pescow, Jamie-Lynn Sigler, Tony Sirico, and Michael Drayer in The Sopranos (1999)
    Criminalité
    Mahershala Ali and Alex R. Hibbert in Moonlight - L'histoire d'une vie (2016)
    Drame
    Bruce Willis in Piège de cristal (1988)
    Mesure
    Cho Yeo-jeong in Parasite (2019)
    Thriller

    Histoire

    Modifier

    Le saviez-vous

    Modifier
    • Anecdotes
      Director Eric Louzil's house was used as the location for the home of Gillian Kaites.
    • Gaffes
      Jud rips off Vicki's shirt. In the next scene she has her shirt on again.
    • Citations

      Gillian Kaites: Cops were dying all over the place and all I could do was act like a woman. I knew my days as a cop were over.

    • Autres versions
      The film was heavily cut for its 1987 UK video release with 5 minutes 34 seconds being removed from scenes of women fighting, the chalet 'snuff movie' scene, and a scene intercutting a lesbian sequence with a woman being assaulted. Most of the cuts were waived for the 2003 Hollywood DVD though 24 secs were cut to remove nudity during a rape scene.
    • Connexions
      Featured in Grim Reaper: Rock You to Hell (1987)
    • Bandes originales
      Lust for Freedom
      Written by Steve Grimmett and Nick Bowcott

      Performed by Grim Reaper

      From the Album "Rock You to Hell" Available on RCA Records and Cassettes

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    FAQ15

    • How long is Lust for Freedom?Propulsé par Alexa

    Détails

    Modifier
    • Date de sortie
      • 10 juillet 1987 (United States)
    • Pays d’origine
      • United States
    • Site officiel
      • Troma
    • Langue
      • English
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • Lust for Freedom
    • Lieux de tournage
      • Ely, Nevada, ÉTATS-UNIS
    • sociétés de production
      • Mesa Films
      • Troma Entertainment
      • Mesa Films / Troma
    • Consultez plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

    Spécifications techniques

    Modifier
    • Durée
      • 1h 32m(92 min)
    • Couleur
      • Color
    • Mixage
      • Mono
    • Rapport de forme
      • 1.85 : 1

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