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That's just one of the many sensations experienced by the
title character in Blonde on a Bum Trip, an unforgettable, music-packed drugsploitation roughie that floored many an unprepared viewer back in the VHS days of Something Weird. Clocking in just a hair over an hour by the time the end credits roll, it's a crazed NYC slice of black-and-white drug scare fun buoyed by an unusually strong soundtrack featuring catchy songs by The Vagrants, Thee Neons, and The E-Types. Largely slapped together via narration in the editing room in the best sexploitation tradition, this was the handiwork of several associates of Michael and Roberta Findlay including producers Ed Adlum (Shriek of the Mutilated) and Jack Bravman (Snuff). Weirdly, this was also the only official cinematography credit for Leon Gast, who ended up making the Oscar-winning doc When We Were Kings!
The most conniving of the bunch, Vanessa, talks her boyfriend TJ into "loving up" Susan whose chemistry skills could come in handy coming up with a batch of LSD.
One persuasive speech from a young professor later, and there's no turning back and poor Susan is dragged into a world of blaring acid rock, bare butts galore, and bad trips with everyone looking like they're in a distorted mirror.
presentations out there in HD. You won't believe how clear and pristine this is compared to the what we've had before. The DTS-HD MA English 2.0 mono audio is also in
great shape (with optional English SDH subtitles), all the better to appreciate that soundtrack. Here you get a pair of very packed new audio commentaries; the first has Adlum and director (and actor) Raf Mauro moderated by Howie Pyro, and the second with Bravman and Distribpix's Steven Morowitz. Between the two you get plenty about the challenges of trying to make a movie for 10 grand, the reason this film is better than Gone with the Wind, the IDs for the various local bands seen and heard in the film, the background behind many of the locations, and plenty of anecdotes about the film and the colorful characters involved (especially on the financing end). Also included are the wild original trailer, an image gallery (3m20s), and three vintage classroom LSD scare films from the Something Weird archive, all free of watermarks and looking to be fresh scans: Beyond LSD (23m12s), the Encyclopedia Britannica Education Corp.'s Philadelphia-shot Ups/Downs (23m46s), and the San Mateo School District's LSD-25 (26m35s). After watching all of these, you'll be afraid to touch anything stronger than Benadryl. The package also comes with a booklet featuring a 2015 essay by Howie Pyro and edited by SWV's Lisa Petrucci dissecting 'the ultimate garage rock and roll movie," followed by an extensive Petrucci-penned analysis of the intersection of anti-drug propaganda and music bursting from the youth scene.