Even
by the low standards of Crown International Pictures, the marketing for Chain Gang Women is shameless,
suggesting that the movie belongs to the lurid women-in-prison genre that, at
the time of this film’s release, was generating big returns for Roger Corman’s
New World Pictures. Instead, Chain Gang
Women is about two male convicts on a chain gang. Weed (Michael Stearns) is
an aggressive career criminal, while Harris (Robert Lott) is a pothead
imprisoned for a minor drug offense. Following the usual routine for these
types of stories, Weed breaks out while shackled to Harris, thus dragging an
“innocent” guy into a crime spree. As for the women of the title, they’re Weed’s
victims. First he cajoles Harris into going home, where Harris’ girlfriend
acquires a hacksaw for removing the escaped convicts’ chains. Then Harris
stupidly agrees to runs an errand, giving Weed an opportunity to rape Harris’
girlfriend. Later, Weed drags Harris (and the girlfriend) along to a rural
house, where Weed lays siege to an old guy and his young wife. That occasions
another rape. Slow-moving dreck populated by interchangeable characters, Chain Gang Women makes Corman’s various women-in-prison flicks seem
zesty and imaginative by comparison. Even the use of potent blues-rock songs on
the soundtrack and some zippy split-screen imagery aren’t enough to make Chain Gang Women interesting.
Chain Gang Women: LAME
3 comments:
I like that the inmate christened "Weed" isn't the pothead.
Tells you most of what you need to know about the movie.
Can't comment on the film, but I have the 1-sheet!
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