
best known as the
director of the notorious horror roughie, The Last House on Dead End Street, the late Roger Watkins stayed busy in exploitation including a very strange, fascinating detour into adult filmmaking in the early 1980s with titles like startling Corruption. One of his earliest pornographic features was the more frivolous but still perverse The Pink Ladies, which features his usual penchant for pounding, experimental electronic music and warped surprises at every turn. And despite the title, it has nothing to do with Grease.
by
Kay imagining a lesbian brothel indulgence involving Marlene Willoughby and Barbara Daniels. As it turns out, all of these marrieds have pretty wild inner lives with the commuter husbands getting just as far out including Raymond (Adrian), who has a BDSM scenario in his head that wound up being snipped out of most video editions. If that weren't enough, you also get a batch of steamy scenes with Vanessa Del Rio as a train stop object of desire, a crazy orgy scene (set to "Ride of the Valkyries") involving participants covered in body paint at a gym, a fun turn by Christine De Shaffer as another put-upon member of the titular circle of friends, and a goofy sort-of twist non-ending, and you've got a funny, adults-ony curio that keeps getting better with age.
The extras kick off with a video interview with a completely nude Adrian (13m55s), a.k.a. John A. Mozzer, who talks about first going out for
a different, more violent Watkins role and his own proclivity for bondage that he got to explore in this film complete with the nickname "Spike." Ultraviolent's Art Ettinger, who befriended Watkins and conducted the longest interview with him in print, offers a detailed account of the film (18m31s) from their conversations together, explaining how this film emerged from the completion of the disco porno The Night Bird along with the much more harrowing Her Name Was Lisa. He also goes into Watkins' thoughts on his adult output, the film's official X rating by the MPAA, the use of actors Michael Gaunt and Jesse Adams (who had appeared as comical gravediggers in City of the Living Dead), Watkins' admiration for Fox and Del Rio, Kerman's personal issues at the time, and a colorful story about a coffee shop encounter in Pittsburgh. Also included are a production stills gallery (3m33s) from Mozzer's collection, a script and shooting schedule gallery (1m45s),