A bored teenage girl decides to become a groupie to meet rock stars, joining Opal Butterfly on the road. However, she soon realizes that being a groupie isn't as glamorous or exciting as she... Read allA bored teenage girl decides to become a groupie to meet rock stars, joining Opal Butterfly on the road. However, she soon realizes that being a groupie isn't as glamorous or exciting as she initially thought.A bored teenage girl decides to become a groupie to meet rock stars, joining Opal Butterfly on the road. However, she soon realizes that being a groupie isn't as glamorous or exciting as she initially thought.
- Det. Sgt.
- (as Neil Hallet)
- Thief
- (as Flanagan)
- Bob
- (as Jimmie Edwardes)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
Has a brilliant (but sadly unavailable) soundtrack and has been reissued on video as "Groupie Girl". If you are into the 60`s, the music and are vaguely broadminded, I recommend this film wholeheartedly. It`s closer to 60`s culture than most of the more famous titles that often spring to mind.
We (the family) have viewed it and the character Bob, though having a moustache, we do not this the ears and hair line and cheeks are true. Jimmy was my uncle and he was not as thin (both body and mind) as the actor in the film. His politics would never have allowed him to have taken part in this film. Though he was gay, he never would have allowed him to get involved with the party scene. It must have been another actor masquerading as Jimmy. The scene where the putative Bob takes a puff on a joint is laughable. My uncle never smoked. The Svengali-like host (we assume to be a Brian Epstien look a like) was also risible....
The director Derek Ford would go on to a pretty lengthy career in the British sex industry, but this might be his best film, even if it's probably his tamest (by the late 70's he was doing hardcore porn flicks). The producer Stanley Long was also active in the industry and directed stuff like "Sex and the Other Woman". The infamous Collinson twins, Madeline and Mary, from Hammer's "Twins of Evil" make a cameo appearance in a bizarre scene at a swinging party where the guests couple up based on assigned animal impersonations (don't ask). The Collinsons have virtually no dialogue, but they offer up some fleeting nudity (and, after all, they weren't exactly known for their brilliant line readings). The music is all by obscure, third-rate British Invasion bands, but still its pretty good for the soundtrack of a cheap exploitation flick like this. I liked "I, a Groupie" better, but this better than other groupie-oriented films I've seen like "Bummer" (or, for that matter, "Almost Famous"). Worth seeing I guess.
Did you know
- TriviaDuring the opening sequence, the van with the credits written on it appears to knock over a pedestrian as it goes over a zebra crossing.
- GoofsBoom mike drops into frame when Laura bends over to pick up her coat in the dressing room near the beginning of the picture.
- Quotes
Steve: What do you want? You got them all haven't you?
Hotel Porter: I never saw them other two leave.
Steve: Ran into the street they did. You frightened them off. Wouldn't have girls in my room. But, eh, I do have a soft spot for old soldiers...
Hotel Porter: Filth!
- Crazy creditsThe credits (cast and crew) are all painted onto the side of a van which the camera follows during the opening title sequence.
- ConnectionsFeatured in Bad Girls (1993)
- How long is I Am a Groupie?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- Les affamées du mâle
- Filming locations
- Hungerford Bridge, London, England, UK(the group cross)
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime1 hour 26 minutes
- Sound mix