
INDECENT DESIRES
B&W, 1967, 71 mins. 21 secs.
Directed by Doris Wishman
Starring Sharon Kent, Michael Alaimo, Trom Little, Jackie Richards
AGFA / Something Weird (Blu-ray) (US R0 HD), Image Entertainment (DVD) (US R1 NTSC)
A TASTE OF FLESH
B&W, 1967, 71 mins. 55 secs.
Directed by Doris Wishman
Starring Michael Alaimo, Darlene Bennett, Layla Peters, Buck Starr, Peggy Steffans
AGFA / Something Weird (Blu-ray) (US R0 SD)
ANOTHER DAY, ANOTHER MAN
B&W, 1966, 70 mins. 50 secs.
Directed by Doris Wishman
Starring Barbi Kemp, Mary O'Hara, Tony Gregory, Darlene Bennett, Bob Oran, Sam Stewart
AGFA / Something Weird (Blu-ray) (US R0HD), Image Entertainment (DVD) (US R1 NTSC)
MY BROTHER'S WIFE
B&W, 1966, 70 mins. 30 secs.
Directed by Doris Wishman
Starring
June Roberts, Sam Stewart, Bob Oran, Darlene Bennett, Joni Roberts
AGFA / Something Weird (Blu-ray) (US R0HD), Image Entertainment (DVD) (US R1 NTSC)
PASSION FEVER
B&W, 1969, 51 mins. 46 secs.
Directed by Doris Wishman & Stelios Jackson
Starring Pano Katteri, Katerina Helmi, Mbeka Yiouranti, Dora Mbarnia
AGFA / Something Weird (Blu-ray) (US R0 SD)
THE SEX PERILS OF PAULETTE
B&W, 1965, 66 mins. 21 secs.
Directed by Doris Wishman
Starring Anna Karol, Alan Feinstein, Darlene Bennett, Bob Oran, Pamela Fields
AGFA / Something Weird (Blu-ray) (US R0 HD)
HOT MONTH OF AUGUST
B&W, 1966, 75 mins. 21 secs.
Directed by Sokrates Kapsaskis and Doris Wishman
Starring Petros Fyssoun, Giannis Fertis, Minas Christidis
AGFA / Something Weird (Blu-ray) (US R0 HD)
TOO MUCH TOO OFTEN
B&W, 1968, 71 mins. 39 secs.
Directed by Doris Wishman
Starring Buck Starr, Sharon Kent, Jackie Richards, Sam Stewart, Darlene Bennett
AGFA / Something Weird (Blu-ray) (US R0 SD)
mind-boggling The Films of Doris Wishman: The Twilight Years, Something
Weird and AGFA jump back to the second major period in the career of exploitation cinema's legendary auteur with her flurry of black-and-white sexploitation films cranked out between 1965 and 1968. Shot in her familiar stomping grounds of New York City (including extensive use of Wishman's own distinctive apartment), these nine films comprise The Films of Doris Wishman: The Moonlight Years, all more or less falling under the roughie category that skirted censorship restrictions of the time by blending comparatively mild nudity and sex with a mean violent streak. Other filmmakers like Michael Findlay, Russ Meyer, Joe Sarno, Joseph P. Mawra, Herschell Gordon Lewis, William Rotsler, and David F. Friedman had dipped their toes in the roughie pool as well, but Wishman and regular cinematographer C. Davis Smith gave it their own spin with fragmented images and outrageous plotlines where reality itself seems about to tip over on its head at any moment. Wishman would hearken back to the roughie later in the color era with her incredible Love Toy, while more explicit adult films would keep it going in various permutations to the end of the '70s. However, if you want to see the roughie in all its pure glory, get ready to be smacked across the face here by Wishman in her prime.
(White Slaves of Chinatown's Darlene) has her life turned upside down when she's repeatedly badgered and ultimately
raped by her apartment building's skeevy superintendent. She ends up killing him with an ashtray in self defense and flees to the anonymity of the big city, a hotbed where seedy guys are just looking to put the moves on an innocent target like her. Apart from dealing with guys wearing the ugliest boxer shorts known to man, our heroine must preserve her sanity at all costs and winds up befriending another older woman whose son turns out to be, alas, a cop hot on her trail. What's a girl to do?
Also on disc one is the craziest of all the Wishman roughies,
1967's Indecent Desires, which plays the closest to a horror movie and also from a sparkling new 2K restoration. Loner Manhattan weirdo Zeb (Alaimo, another future mainstream TV figure) thinks he's found the answer to his perverse prayers when he finds a magic ring in a trash can and a blonde doll that reminds him of the object of his one-sided affections: Ann (Kent), an office worker who has a stable existence with her boyfriend (Little) and best friend Babs (Richards). As it turns out, anything Zeb does to the doll can be felt by Ann, who thinks she's losing her mind and quickly escalates to a state of pure hysteria that threatens her very existence.
most of the heavy lifting here with some gonzo shots so vivid they ended up being incorporated prominently
in Something Weird's sizzle reel that opened up its DVD releases for years. This one also hit DVD from Image (paired up with My Brother's Wife), with extras including "The Doris Wishman Trailer Show" (Indecent Desires, My Brother's Wife, The Amazing Transplant, Another Day, Another Man, Bad Girls Go to Hell, Blaze Starr Goes Nudist, Deadly Weapons, Double Agent 73, Gentlemen Prefer Nature Girls, Hot Month of August, The Immoral Three, Nude on the Moon, The Sex Perils of Paulette, A Taste of Flesh, and Too Much Too Often), a Wishman gallery of exploitation art, and two Barry Mahon nudie shorts, "The Room Mates" (9m25s) and "Music to Strip By" (8m40s). The AGFA/SW release adds significant value with an epic new commentary by the legendary Frank Henenlotter for Bad Girls Go to Hell (his very articulate love for Wishman is familiar by now and he knocks it out of the park as always pointing out familiar players, locations, and visual tropes), and another by film historian Liz Purchell for Indecent Desires focusing more on a knowledgeable survey of the general straight and gay exploitation scene of the era and how the films
were distributed and marketed. Also included are trailers for all three films, with the Indecent Desires one in a fresh new HD scan.
Flesh, presented here from the S-VHS Something Weird master since film elements no longer exist. Here we get a five-character take on the old "assassins hold innocent folks hostage to pull off a political hit" idea (most famously used in the Frank Sinatra vehicle Suddenly). However, this time the claustrophobic action gets a sexploitation twist as Hannah ("Cleo Nova," actually Peggy Steffens or more famously Peggy Sarno) goes to stay with lesbian pals Carol (sleaze favorite Bennett) and Bobi (Peters). Alas, their fun is interrupted when Nick (Alaimo again) and Frankie (uber-scuzzy Starr) crash the pad to use it as the home base to take out a visiting dignitary. As usual you get looped voices, catchy stock music, and a fun twist ending you might not see coming. Quality is confined by the source, but in lieu of anything better ever turning up, this will have to suffice.
For another walk on the
sordid side, let's continue to disc two and take a gander at Another Day, Another Man, in which lady of the evening Tess (O'Hara) tries to explain to her prudish friend Ann (Kemp) why being a hooker ain't so bad after all. Naturally financial disaster forces Ann to take up hooking for Tess' employer, Bert (Stewart), just to make ends meet, and it all leads where such things must - disaster! Sex doesn't pay, at least in Wishman's world, but it's so darn fun on the road to ruin that few will care about the message. That also means women in lingerie, trashy and all-too-catchy jazz music including the unforgettable "The Hellraisers" by Syd Dale later adopted as the Something Weird theme song, and shaky camerawork that looks more accidental than cinema verite. It also features starring roles for Wishman's trademark checkered couch (which features prominently throughout this set), the usual improvised go-go home routines, and a surprising lack of actual nudity given the target audience.
If you love Wishman's tendency towards cinematic distraction though, it's a goldmine. As mentioned above, this one premiered on DVD from Image back in the day with Bad Girls Go to Hell and looks immeasurably better here
with a spotless, jaw-dropping restoration from the camera negative. Hopefully Doris herself would be proud.
who manages to point out every bit of minutae you could want about the director, her oft-filmed living
quarters, her working relationship with Smith, all of the actors, and tons more.
watermark stuck in the corner, so just
consider this one a curious bonus feature.
apartment dance parties. Paulette's narration manages to more or less hold it all together (even slathered
over the "dialogue" scenes), and the end result is 100% pure Wishman nuttiness with staple Darlene Bennett turning up here as the corrupting roommate Tracy, a model and part-time hooker who has horrible taste in undergarments and worse taste in theatrical agents. This one looks far better here than the ancient SWV master we've had floating around for years, and even better, this is a whopping 10 minutes longer than that 56-minute version with a greatly improved scan from the original negative. Alas, you don't get any bonus footage of that cute Central Park squirrel who nearly steals the opening scene. It also sounds great, though the original sound mix features some weird, abrupt edits in the narration that have always been there.
opposed to Passion Fever. Here we follow down on his luck Jason (Fertis), a "defeated man," heading home on an expensive cruise after failing to strike it rich in Athens. In transit he reconnects with old friend Hope and her mother, so he
decides to ingratiate himself as a potential son-in-law for some easy living. He also crosses paths at a bar with slick gigolo Kostas (Fyssoun), who knows how to ply his trade with older women. In between new sexploitation insert shots with the actors' faces covered, we follow Jason's temporary shift into prostitution and his journey back home where he ends up entangled with his new friends in an insidious murder plot. Wonderfully pulpy and engaging throughout, this one has been seamlessly tailored for the American sleaze market and even features a quick early appearance by Marie Liljedahl, who would later star in classics like Eugenie... The Story of Her Journey into Perversion and Grimm's Fairy Tales for Adults.
Park Avenue, he barges his way into an ad agency office where he proceeds to screw and smack his way through everyone in sight. However, Mike's seedy past might catch up with him thanks to a little too much blackmail and a cop sniffing around his current antics. The title definitely applies here for an
unusual Wishman film whose focus on a fallen man instead of a woman gets surprisingly frank at times, including an early reference to Mike's tendency to take incriminating photos of his subservient male clients. Of course you also get the usual Wishman condiments here like big hairdos, silly dubbing, and questionable decor, which means it's a great time all around. Disc three then wraps up with trailers for all three films, two of them newly scanned in HD; amusingly, the one for Paulette is textless which makes some of the voiceover completely confusing! The set also comes with an insert booklet featuring "Blonde Wigs and Ashtrays," a handy and appreciative overview of Wishman's roughie cycle by Something Weird's Lisa Petrucci, and "A Certain Satisfaction," a lively print interview with Wishman by Mike Watt that clarifies some significant misunderstandings about her attitude toward her work.