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'Sheba, Baby'

Original title: Sheba, Baby
  • 1975
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 30m
IMDb RATING
5.7/10
2.1K
YOUR RATING
Pam Grier in 'Sheba, Baby' (1975)
Home Video Trailer from MGM Home Entertainment
Play trailer0:20
1 Video
50 Photos
ActionCrimeDramaThriller

A Chicago private detective returns back home to Louisville, Kentucky, to help her father fight mobsters.A Chicago private detective returns back home to Louisville, Kentucky, to help her father fight mobsters.A Chicago private detective returns back home to Louisville, Kentucky, to help her father fight mobsters.

  • Director
    • William Girdler
  • Writers
    • William Girdler
    • David Sheldon
  • Stars
    • Pam Grier
    • Austin Stoker
    • D'Urville Martin
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.7/10
    2.1K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • William Girdler
    • Writers
      • William Girdler
      • David Sheldon
    • Stars
      • Pam Grier
      • Austin Stoker
      • D'Urville Martin
    • 33User reviews
    • 42Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Videos1

    Sheba, Baby
    Trailer 0:20
    Sheba, Baby

    Photos50

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    Top cast45

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    Pam Grier
    Pam Grier
    • Sheba Shayne
    Austin Stoker
    Austin Stoker
    • Brick Williams
    D'Urville Martin
    D'Urville Martin
    • Pilot
    Rudy Challenger
    • Andy Shayne
    Richard Merrifield
    Richard Merrifield
    • Shark
    • (as Dick Merrifield)
    Christipher Joy
    • Walker
    Charles Kissinger
    Charles Kissinger
    • Phil
    Charles Broaddus
    • Hammerhead
    Maurice Downs
    • Killer
    • (as Maurice Downes)
    Ernest Cooley
    • Whale
    Edward Reece Jr.
    • Racker
    • (as Edward Reece)
    William Foster Jr.
    • Waldo
    Bobby Cooley
    • Tank
    Paul Grayber
    • Fin
    Sylvia Jacobson
    • Tail
    Leroy Clark Jr.
    • Customer #1
    Mike Clifford
    • Policeman #2
    Rose Ann Deel
    • Policewoman
    • Director
      • William Girdler
    • Writers
      • William Girdler
      • David Sheldon
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews33

    5.72K
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    Featured reviews

    5gridoon

    Average.

    Pam Grier is as lean, cool and tough as ever in this film (in fact, she's arguably tougher here than in "Foxy Brown"), but the plot is overly familiar ("Return of the Dragon", anyone?) and the flick is poorly edited in just about all the crucial spots (fight and action sequences). This one is mostly for Grier fans, who'll have an OK time. The "PG" rating is questionable, considering a few quite graphic and bloody scenes. (**)
    6treakle_1978

    Sweet as Sugar

    Not as good as Coffy or foxy brown but it was entertaining. Pam Grier is the standout in this movie. Action sequences could have been sharper..
    Michael_Elliott

    Not a Classic But Fun

    'Sheba, Baby' (1975)

    ** 1/2 (out of 4)

    Blaxploitation Girdler style has Pam Grier leaving Chicago and heading to Louisville when she hears a bunch of thugs are trying to push her father out of his business. Soon dad is shot dead and it's up to Grier to track down the killers and put an end to them. Once again, this isn't the greatest film in the world and it's certainly not an Oscar-winner but if you enjoy the genre and what it has to offer then you're going to be able to enjoy what's here. I was a little hesitant going into a PG-rated blaxploiation film but the screenplay offers up enough action to keep things moving even though I'm sure fans of Grier want the R-rated action that comes with the nudity. Grier is as tough as ever here and she really turns in another winning performance. What always amazes me about her is how much fire and energy you can see her burning even if she's just standing around not doing a thing. Then, when it's time to fight, that energy just erupts like a volcano and one can't help but respect that energy she brings to a film. The supporting players include Rudy Challenger, Austin Stoker and Dick Merrifield but there's no doubt that the film belongs to Grier. Having lived in Louisville for many years, the film gave me even more entertainment than it probably will from someone who has never visited the city. There were several locations that I recognized and that's always going to add a little bit more charm to a film for someone. The movie does go over the top in its violence and I was a little surprised to see more of the red stuff than I was expecting. Of course, being a blaxploitation picture we've got to end the film with a wild chase and shoot out and that doesn't disappoint here either. Seeing Grier in a wetsuit never hurts either.
    6Hey_Sweden

    Hotter 'n' Coffy! Meaner 'n' Foxy Brown!

    This lesser film from Pam Griers' days as a blaxploitation queen is nonetheless mildly pleasing. Because it's rated PG, it has less punch than Pams' best stuff. Some viewers will really miss the elements of sex and graphic violence. The script, by producer David Sheldon and cult director William Girdler, is somewhat less than inspired, with only one sequence - the pursuit through the carnival - that could be considered memorable. The cast is also more colourless than usual. But Pam, in her inimitable fashion, could make just about anything watchable. Hell, this is worth watching just to see her in a wetsuit.

    Pam plays our title character, Sheba Shayne, a Chicago-based private eye who returns to her hometown of Louisville, Kentucky. It seems that aggressive gangsters are constantly threatening her father Andy (Rudy Challenger) and his loan business, which Andy runs with Shebas' good friend Brick (Austin Stoker). Inevitably, the bad guys will have a full scale war on their hands once Sheba steps into the fray.

    The ever engaging Stoker of "Assault on Precinct 13" fame is a good leading man for Pam, and D'Urville Martin is lively as "Pilot", a lowlife criminal. Christopher Joy is a hoot as a peddler who for whatever reason dresses more like a stereotypical pimp. Dick Merrifield is amusing enough as smiling, smarmy white guy villain "Shark". And it's nice to see Girdler regular Charles Kissinger as a mostly ineffectual white detective. Pam is great entertainment and eye candy as always, even if her role here isn't really on a level with her most famous ones.

    The action scenes are passable (one comeuppance offers a spin on something we'd previously seen in "Coffy"), and the music score by Alex Brown and Monk Higgins (with vocals by Barbara Mason) is good, even if, like so much else here, it's also unmemorable.

    Completists of the filmographies of Pam and Girdler will definitely want to check it out, no matter if it's not their best work.

    Six out of 10.
    6gavin6942

    Pam Grier Bids Farewell to Blaxploitation

    A Chicago private detective (Pam Grier) returns back home to Louisville, Kentucky, to help her father fight mobsters.

    This film was the pet project of director William Girdler, who had already made "Three on a Meathook" (1972) but had yet to make his better known films, "Grizzly" (1976), "Day of the Animals" (1977) and "The Manitou" (1978). During filming, Girdler was only 28... and he would end up dying in a helicopter crash at age 30. (One assumes that had he lived, he would have been a major force in the 1980s.)

    Writer David Sheldon was given the task of writing a script for Pam Grier that was less edgy than the movies Jack Hill had been making. He wrote "Honor" almost literally overnight, which was transformed into "Sheba, baby" by the PR department, and Sheldon was also put on as a producer. This was a huge promotion for Sheldon, who had been at AIP as Larry Gordon's assistant (and later "director of development", which essentially means script reader).

    For me, the blaxploitation subgenre is an interesting one -- did people dress like this? Now, I did not live through the 1970s nor did I grow up in a big city. But I feel like the "pimp" clothes and similar styles were more likely created in the movies and adopted in real life than the other way around. What is especially interesting is that most of the people involved in the subgenre were white... so this was very much how the black community was perceived rather than how it actually was.

    One exception to this in "Sheba" might be the character of "Killer", played by Maurice Downs. Downs was a gangster and heroin dealer in real life, and somehow got mixed up with Sheldon and Girdler. He was also in their follow-up, "Project: Kill" and helped produce it. Tragically (but not surprisingly), he was shot to death outside a restaurant a few years later in true gangster fashion.

    "Sheba, Baby" was a major hit in theaters, even though it is often cited as one of Pam Grier's weaker vehicles when compared to her similarly themed action films "Coffy" and "Foxy Brown" (both made by Jack Hill for AIP). This is fair, and it certainly lacks any iconic moments that really burn into a viewer's mind.

    Despite this being a second or third tier film, it remains an important part of Grier's career, as well as Girdler's career, and there seems to always be a new generation of fans searching out every last AIP picture. Arrow Video has wisely picked this one up and given it the star treatment.

    The Arrow disc has not one, but two audio commentaries. One with writer-producer David Sheldon, which offers incredible insight on AIP, Pam Grier and even legendary director Jack Hill. Heck, some of his detours are more interesting than his recollections of "Sheba", such as how he clarifies that "Grizzly" was not technically a "Jaws" ripoff because "Jaws" had not been released at that point. Heck, even Sheldon's involvement in "Last House on the Left" is discussed!!

    We also have an in-depth retrospective on Pam Grier's time at AIP. Did you know that Grier was working as a switchboard operator before being discovered by Roger Corman and Jack Hill? Amazing!

    This is an absolutely MUST-OWN disc for any fan of AIP.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      This was Pam Grier's final film under contract with American International Pictures.
    • Goofs
      During the final boat chase, Shark is shown firing at least ten shots from a six-shot revolver (a Smith & Wesson Model 36).
    • Quotes

      Sheba Shayne: You better talk, big man, before I put my number one foot down your number one mouth.

      Walker: Shit, you can't kick no shadow, bitch! Catch me!

      [runs away]

    • Alternate versions
      There is a 16 mm version with English dialogue and English subtitles, including character names in brackets when actors speak off-camera and indication of ambient sounds.
    • Connections
      Featured in Black in the 80s: Color in Film (2005)
    • Soundtracks
      Sheba, Baby
      Music by Roderick Rancifer

      Words by Cloteal Cleveland

      Sung by Barbara Mason

      Courtesy of Buddah Records

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    FAQ14

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • October 6, 1976 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Sheba Shayne
    • Filming locations
      • Jefferson County, Kentucky, USA
    • Production companies
      • American International Pictures (AIP)
      • Mid-America Pictures
      • Hollywood West Entertainment
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 30m(90 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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