Fire in Her Bed! (1972) Poster

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Haphazard attempt at soft porn from Nick Millard's assembly line
lor_16 February 2011
Warning: Spoilers
Nick Millard (aka Phillips) has a very low batting average as filmmaker; in baseball terms he couldn't hit his weight. FIRE IN HER BED is one of his least palatable efforts.

Be forewarned, his video saviors in New Jersey, Seduction/After Hours Cinema, have a shill on the payroll whose booklet notes accompanying this film on DVD frankly lie to make it sound vaguely interesting. It is not.

What we have here is another of Nick's randomly assembled bits of silent footage, accompanied by an even more randomly chosen and applied music track, purporting to be an hour-long feature film. Whether it got booked at a few hard-up, marginal adult theaters in the '70s, or was shelved, is a moot point. As an artifact sitting through it four decades later, to quote NIGHT MOVES, "is like watching paint dry". That cheap shot was applied to Eric Rohmer by scripter Alan Sharp, but it applies here.

The attractive anonymous heroine billed as "Donna Rae" is flat-chested but with amazing nipple cones, a Nick fetish. Her story is carried in typically florid and irritating femme narration, waxing poetic and always annoying. Supposedly she is a musical superstar, but the closest we get to an actual recording session scene is a montage or two of the signs outside various L.A. recording studios.

Perhaps the worst scene in the picture is when a recording exec rushes out onto the sidewalk (cheap guerrilla filming, no sets or even permits required) to accost our heroine, with nonsensical dialog dubbed in and, as with the rest of the Silent Era movie, no lip movements at all. Even Fellini had his cast recite the alphabet or something to sort of match up with the post-synch, but Nick is above such rudimentary techniques.

Only Nick would have the temerity to shoot a silent movie about a recording star. Recall that in the first breakthrough talkie THE JAZZ SINGER Jolson is permitted to break into song and even have conversations with his mom in what is otherwise still a Silent Film. Not here - we have endless scenes of our star lolling around with her hippie-styled buddies as random guitar playing and chatter is dubbed on the soundtrack, never matching the action.

FIRE IN HER BED, a truly meaningless title that IMDb used to garble as "Fire Under Her Bed" which sounds like a Denis Leary project, is after all a porn film, so there are several desultory sex scenes. She makes love to a lookalike lesbian in a very tame sequence, providing full frontal nudity and little else. Even on a scale of Nick's dozens of lesbian movies, it is near the bottom in arousal value. And the doppelganger effect of "making love to yourself" due to the matched casting is pointless.

SPOILERS ALERT: Her boy friend, always pretend-playing his guitar, is a mustachioed drip, whose bored sex simulation with our heroine probably contributes to her problems. Nick tries to spice up the action with flashback/flash-forward shots of a hospital's emergency entrance (cheap!) with ambulance siren on the soundtrack, or police radio broadcasts heard, as if to signal her suicide or violent end. But actual conclusion is just as boring as the preceding hour of tedium, as she ups and leaves, symbolically discarding her guitar in its case at the side of the road. A hopeful smile from her and some absurd dancing around a tree complete the random slop that I guess Nick would call a screenplay.

One might think I'm being hard on Nick, but his pretentious approach earns such criticism. I have nothing against pornographers, or filmmakers in general, who aspire merely to entertain and even at the crude level of currently say a Michael Bay, have no loftier notions. But Nick insists on literally teasing his viewers with hints of great import and significance, while delivering zero. This bait & switch approach is irritating in the extreme.

At his best, namely in films like ROXANNA and L'AMOUR DE FEMME, Nick cast some of the most attractive West Coast sexy models of the day, outfitted them glamorously and delivered masturbation-quality lesbian sex.

In FIRE IN HER BED, the essentially R-rated footage is not erotic in the slightest, and cannot justify a crypto-underground movie. Nick claims a Nouvelle Vague inspiration for his direction, but he only copied the worst of the innovations of Godard & company, namely a jump-cuts, anything goes approach. He missed the whole point of the movement.

Even on the level of Nick's usual Freudian Slips (he of course is the "big star" in his own mind that the heroine here is portraying) approach, this non-movie is unenlightening anti-entertainment.
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8/10
Typically offbeat and interesting Nick Phillips soft-core curio
Woodyanders8 November 2011
Warning: Spoilers
Lovely and free-spirited young hippie singer Donna (beautiful slender long-haired brunette Donna Stanley, who has simply amazing large nipples and cute little breasts) goes to Los Angeles, California to seek fame and success in the Hollywood music scene. Donna records an album and falls in with a party hearty bohemian crowd which in turn leads to the inevitable decadent descent into sex, drugs, and booze. Can Donna get out of this wild lifestyle in time? Or is she destined to meet a grim untimely end? Once again Nick Phillips whips up a singularly sensuous and compelling free-form flick complete with erratic back and forth editing, a meandering narrative, purplish stream-of-consciousness narration, floating hand-held cinematography, an eclectic score made up of groovy jazz, digging sitar, and tuneful folk music, and a breezy'n'easy laid-back vibe that astutely nails the casually open-minded "if it feels good, do it" merry and hedonistic sensibility of the far-out swinging 70's sexual revolution. Of course, we also get plenty of tasty nudity and several sizzling soft-core sex scenes, with a steamy lesbian make-out session between Donna and the insanely foxy Barbara Mills rating as the definite erotic highlight. Pretty blonde Ann Perry also pops up to make love to Donna's drippy guitarist boyfriend (greasy mustached hairball Rodney Moore). Amazing, this one ends on a surprising upbeat note with Donna getting out of her depressed funk, regaining her ability to love and appreciate life, and leaving California for richer pastures elsewhere. Worth a watch for fans of Nick's distinctly quirky work.
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8/10
a head-trip into the groovily fatuous world of far out musicians, skeevey liggers and magisterially moustached male groupies!
Weirdling_Wolf5 January 2023
'I am someone! I am no one! I am everyone!' And with such an oblique opening testament begins iconoclast filmmaker, Alan Lindus's morbidly fascinating, occasionally monotonous, downwardly spiralling cautionary tale about an interminably philosophizing, once righteously 'turned on', perkily psychedelic, Rock n' Roll waif, now a boozily burned out case, groggily spouting hoary epigrams like this especially odoriferous nugget: 'I am lonely with a loneliness that smells!' Right on, loneliness stinks, baby!!!!!

Depending on one's robust tolerance for conspicuously incense infused, soft-lensed, Haight-Ashbury soaked, pot-addled hippie-dippy rumpy pumpy, the surprisingly melancholy, grimly nihilistic, 'Fire in her bed' proves quite a head-trip into the groovily fatuous world of far out musicians, skeevey liggers and magisterially moustached male groupies. Muck-master, Lindus's grubbily prurient expose of our sensually permissive, permanently pizzled, dope-addicted destruction, the deliciously overwrought, crypto-zen narration is psychedelically drenched in sensationally shrill sounding sitar wrangling, and in order to maintain the viewer's interest, there is some righteously blissed-out, grape-fueled sapphic grappling, wherein our two exquisite looking, dark-haired, acid-headed angels zealously explore the tantalizing topography of their terrifically titillating, pleasure-hungry bodies!

Heading inexorably to her self-administered, doomily narrated, psychological and physical dissolution, we see our increasingly jaded Heroin Harlot (Donna Rae) finally succumb to the decreasingly groovy, hedonistic happenings about her, with mutual infidelity, chronic opiate abuse, and hella bad vibes taking their not inconsiderable toll, man!!! Sending our musically-orientated, sinuously-limbed, knee-painting, luxuriantly lascivious, terminally tormented, toxically tripping 1970s temptress into the void. Not only is 'Fire in Her Bed' a fascinating period artefact, the heroically inane voice over is not infrequently pure comedic genius!

I shall leave the final eloquent thoughts to the estimable word smithery of the loquacious smut-slinger, Mr. Lindus: 'Let me destroy my soul, destroy my rock, let there be an end, an end to love, end to peace, and end to life, the finish of warm giving, of truth, my love died at my request, I am my hell! To lie screaming mad In a mad word in a mad world!!!!!'

Amen, Donna Rae, Amen!!!!!!
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