While the girls-in-prison
genre has not historically generated an abundance of respectable movies, it
would seem like the formula is simple enough—mistaken identity, false
imprisonment, harassment by guards, sexual abuse by fellow inmates, brazen
escape attempt, blah-blah-blah. Nonetheless, all bets are off whenever Edward
D. Wood Jr. is involved. Revered as a titan of bad cinema thanks to Plan 9 from Outer Space (1959) and other
“classics,” the notorious Ed Wood cowrote this awful movie and also plays a
supporting role. Wood’s co-conspirator was cowriter and director Stephen C.
Apostolof, working under the name A.C. Stephen. By focusing too heavily on the
quasi-pornographic elements of the storyline and by failing to present
interesting villains (or, for that matter, distinct heroines), the filmmakers
generate pure tedium instead of watchable trash. Things start out in the usual
way. Dee (Margie Lanier) sleeps with a man who turns out to be a robber, and he
dumps her at the scene of a crime. She’s arrested and sent to a women’s prison,
where bullish inmate Kat (Tallie Chochane) rapes Dee the first night Dee is
incarcerated. Then, without any explanation of why the women consider their
imprisonment so untenable, Kat organizes a jailbreak and brings Dee along for a
sexual plaything. After Kat’s quintet of escapees encounters trouble with a
group of gypsies, the “fugitive girls” perform a home invasion that results in
a scuzz-cinema riff on an iconic scene from A
Clockwork Orange (1971)—the bit when criminals rape a woman while a
helpless man watches from a wheelchair. The characterization and storyline of Fugitive Girls—also known as Five Loose Women—is abysmal, and the same
can be said of the acting. (No surprise, seeing as how some of the actresses
were plucked from the world of X-rated porn.) More than anything else, Fugitive Girls is a symphony of topless
shots, with endless scenes of voluptuous women dancing, screwing, and
stripping. After unleashing this dud onto an unsuspecting world, Apostolof and
Wood reteamed for The Beach Bunnies
(1976), which was the last of Wood’s projects released during his lifetime.
Fugitive Girls: LAME
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