Based
on its title and release year, you’d think The
Female Bunch was a low-budget riff on Sam Peckinpah’s violent Western The Wild Bunch (1969). Instead, it’s a
wobbly mixture of crime, feminism, revenge, and the group dynamics of a
cult-like organization. Although the movie contains many interesting ideas and
a handful of intense scenes, it also has the usual problems of movies directed
by (or, in this case, co-directed by) Al Adamson. Scenes don’t cut together,
sound work is sloppy, and transitions are pathetic. Notwithstanding a prologue,
the movie begins with Sandy (Nesa Renet) experiencing man trouble in Vegas.
Enter Sandy’s go-go dancer buddy Libby (Regina Carrol), who invites Sandy to
join a group of women who live on a desert ranch. Leading the group is
whip-cracking Grace (Jennifer Bishop), who has high expectations of loyalty:
Sandy’s initiation test involves climbing into a coffin and letting Grace bury
her alive. No men are allowed on Grace’s ranch except, for some reason, aging
horse wrangler Monti (Lon Chaney Jr.). After establishing this fraught
scenario, the movie loses focus during a shapeless second act featuring crime
sprees, a druggy lesbian scene, and a debauched trip to Mexico. Toward the end
of the picture, the plot snaps back into place and the movie’s level of violence
increases dramatically. So while The
Female Bunch has thrills, it also bombards the audience with lots of
discombobulated nastiness. Although Bishop is suitably fierce, watching Chaney
in his last film role is depressing, since he’s bloated and his voice is nearly
gone, and this picture doesn’t mark a high point in costar Russ Tamblyn’s
career, either.
The Female Bunch: LAME
From Robert Wise to Al Adamson, Tamblyn was a long, long way from West Side Story.
ReplyDelete