When
collaborating with producer Roger Corman, writer Charles B. Griffith often infused B-movies with an offbeat brand of social satire. When operating beyond
Corman’s influence, however, Griffith frequently succumbed to lesser impulses.
And so it goes with The Swinging Barmaids,
a befuddling exploitation flick revolving around sexy women who sling
drinks at a joint called the Swing-a-Ling. The movie is perplexing because it
has aspects of respectable filmmaking, inasmuch as nudity is kept to a minimum
and lip service is paid to workplace issues. The barmaids fret about grabby customers and sore feet, and one barmaid notes that she’s been able to
put her boyfriend through medical school by letting drunks objectify her.
Yet The Swinging Barmaids—a misnomer
of a title, since none of the women sleeps around—isn’t about the plight of
put-upon women. It’s about a nutter who gets off by killing them and
photographing their corpses.
The Swinging
Barmaids gets darker and darker as it goes along, which is saying a lot
seeing as how the picture opens with an uncomfortably lengthy real-time
sequence of a dude stalking and slaughtering a busty blonde. (This first victim
is played by sex-movie queen Dyanne Thorne.) Once the plot gets moving, B-movie
stalwart William Smith joins the mix as the lead police detective on the
case, though he doesn’t do much of anything until the grim climax. Receiving most of the focus is curvy waitress Jenny (Laura Hippe), the one with the
boyfriend in medical school. Griffith’s script gives Jenny a fair amount of
dimension, at least compared to the non-people one normally encounters in this
sort of picture, but Griffith’s efforts are not sufficient to create any sort of
emotional involvement.
In lieu of proper drama, the picture becomes a
ticking-clock scenario while the killer works his way through other victims
on his way to Jenny. Even scenes of the killer covertly interacting with the
barmaids once he talks his way into a job as a bouncer at the Swing-a-Ling feel like filler between murders. Regarding those murders, they’re
rendered in a fairly restrained fashion, excepting the nasty opening kill. So
even though it would be a huge stretch to describe The Swinging Barmaids as worthwhile cinema, the picture isn’t as relentlessly hateful as the usual women-in-peril grindhouse offering.
The Swinging Barmaids: FUNKY
Not sure if you bumped up this review to be a nice guy, or if it was just a coincidence, but either way great write up! And a fair one at that.
ReplyDeleteLike most 70's grindhouse films, I'm careful of whom I would recommend this film to. Most would probably write it off as trash. I think it's a gem though. Mainly because it is the closest film that I can think of to feature William Smith in a role similar to a Dirty Harry-type of character in Law Enforcement. While I would have liked Smith to have had more of a role, I'll take what I can get.
The movie also is a funky time capsule for the clothes, cars, and decor from that era. Smith looks like one bad dude sporting that coat of his.
Partially a coincidence -- had the review on standby, so when I saw your request, I was happy to oblige. And it doesn't take much cajoling to get a Smith double-feature out of me. I'm a fan, as well.
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