Some subgenres of
exploitation cinema border on the unconscionable, such as the
rape-victim-seeks-revenge movies that hide misogyny behind feminist rhetoric,
and some dive wholeheartedly into the abyss of pure depravity. Really, isn’t it
almost sufficient to cite the names of two such genres, “Nazispoitlation” and
“slavesploitation”? As lawyer Joseph N. Welch once said to red-baiting
Senator Joe McCarthy, “Have you no sense of decency?” Clearly, were that
inquiry posed to David S. Friedman, who produced the infamous Nazispoitation
epic Ilsa, She Wolf of the SS under the
pseudonym “Herman Traeger,” Friedman’s answer would be damning. Just as
Ilsa, She Wolf of the SS is the apex
of tastelessness, it’s the apex of shamelessness, because it’s a noxious blend
of sotftcore porn, Third Reich iconography, and torture fetishism. The mere
fact that Friedman positions Nazis as psychotic villains does not excuse the
picture’s grotesque nature, and neither does the fact that the movie is weirdly
entertaining because of its campy excess. Vile is vile, no matter the particulars.
Set entirely at a remote Nazi prison
camp during World War II, the picture tracks the adventures of the camp’s
sadistic commandant, Ilsa (Dyanne Thorne). A twisted medical researcher in the
vein of real-life Nazi war criminal Joseph Mengele,
Ilsa treats the people in her custody like lab rats and/or sex toys. In her
laboratory, she burns, dismembers, freezes, mutilates, and whips people to test
their levels of endurance. In her private cabin, she forces male prisoners to
service her, and she inevitably castrates her lovers afterward as punishment
for failing to fully satisfy her cravings.
The main threads of the slender plot
include the following: 1) Ilsa meets an American prisoner with remarkable
sexual stamina, which gives the inmates a means of distraction for mounting an
escape attempt; 2) Ilsa brutalizes a female prisoner whom she cannot
intimidate, thus making a formidable and mortal enemy; and 3) Ilsa curries
favor with a visiting superior officer by first torturing and killing an inmate
as a form of dinner theater, and then by granting the officer’s wish for a
golden shower. Scenes of prisoners conspiring to break free are brisk and
perfunctory, because Friedman, director Don Edmonds, and writer Jonah Royston
are much more concerned with stringing together images of sex and violence.
How
nasty is Ilsa, She Wolf of the SS?
Well, the bit during which Ilsa drops maggots into a nude victim’s open wound,
then smothers the wound with gangrenous pus to transform the victim into a new
Typhoid Mary, comes to mind. And how sleazy is Ilsa, She Wolf of the SS? Leading lady Thorne, a tough-looking
Amazon with enormous breasts, does myriad sex scenes and striptease bits, and
nearly every female in the cast ends up fully naked, usually while being raped
or tortured, if not both. Does it matter that the acting is bad and that the
production values are patently artificial? Of course not.
The Canadian-made Ilsa, She Wolf of the SS did so well
internationally that Thorne played variations on the character in three sequels (1976's Ilsa, Harem Keeper of the Oil Sheiks and the 1977 releases Ilsa, the Tigress of Siberia and Wanda, the Wicked Warden), some of which shared the original movie’s X-rating, and some
of which were coproduced by American companies. Those eager to learn more about
Ilsa’s distasteful exploits are duly informed.
Ilsa, She Wolf of the SS: FREAKY
9 comments:
Director Edmonds was known for playing hippie types in TV sitcoms and beach party movies before this.
Joe McCarthy was a Republican Senator from Wisconsin from 1947-1957.
Ilse Koch, the wife of the commandant of the Buchenwald concentration camp, did not conduct medical experiments on prisoners.
Thanks for the fact-check on Koch (though I believe that's where the filmmakers got the character's first name), but since the Senate is part of Congress, I'm not sure what the suggested correction is there.
A perfect exploitation movie!
>"Congressman Joe McCarthy"
A member of the U.S. House of Representatives is referred to as either a Congressman or Representative (Rep.-D or Rep.-R). A member of the U.S. Senate is a Senator. The two positions are distinct, not interchangeable.
An interesting civics lesson from Mr. Winkler. From the brisk reading that I did on the subject, I gather this distinction is more of an honorific than anything official, as the Senate is very much half of the U.S. Congress, but if the general practice overwhelmingly skews in one direction, I happy to adhere to the norm.
I suspect that Peter L. Winkler may have been character actor Edward Andrews in a former life.
@peter l winkler
this is too funny. we have a 'grammar nazi' commenting about a nazi movie....!
what i dont get is that this movie 'did well' financially back when vcr's hadnt hit bit worldwide. how did this turkey make money? drive-in theaters in austria? today we have really bad movies with bad acting called 'porn'. i guess this is just the 70's equivalent....
The film did very well in North America as well, playing mostly at adult movie theaters.
It should be noted the film was financed by a Canadian company, but filmed in the U.S., leading to the funniest thing about it: the exteriors were shot on the set of 'Hogan's Heroes'.
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