5 reviews
UCLA coeds Cathy Phillips (Deborah Raffin) and Diane Emery (Lynne Moody) are driving around the country before the start of school. They get a flat tire. A black man is willing to help them but that gets the ire of Sheriff Danen (Chuck Connors). The Sheriff arrests the girls for trespassing and rapes Diane in jail. When Diane tries to raise the issue, the Judge adds prostitution to the charges and sends the girls to the prison farm in Badham County. The Judge turns out to be the Sheriff's cousin. The prison is a corrupt racist excuse to provide slave labor for the well-connected. It's run by Dancer (Robert Reed) and his sadistic prisoners-turned-guards.
I can't believe that this was a TV movie. Obviously, the nudity would be cut but it's still a brutal viewing experience. This is a mix of 70's sexploitation and social justice. Parts of this are very hard to watch. It is grindhouse in its nature. The acting ranges from solid professional to amateurish. Sometimes, the sexploitation detracts from the seriousness of the work.
I can't believe that this was a TV movie. Obviously, the nudity would be cut but it's still a brutal viewing experience. This is a mix of 70's sexploitation and social justice. Parts of this are very hard to watch. It is grindhouse in its nature. The acting ranges from solid professional to amateurish. Sometimes, the sexploitation detracts from the seriousness of the work.
- SnoopyStyle
- Jul 10, 2021
- Permalink
Reminiscent of the Roger Corman cycle of "babes-behind-bars" flicks from the late '60s and early '70s, this is an enjoyable little exploitation item. Maybe some think it has pretensions to mask as "social commentary," but don't believe it, and just enjoy it for what it is--a made-for-TV version of those great Corman Filipino "prison-chicks" flicks. Apparently the video version is a lot more explicit than the TV version, but I haven't seen that one yet, so I can't say. Deborah Raffin and Lynne Moody are the two poor souls who get shanghaied into a Southern hellhole, and while Raffin is her usual bland, whitebread self, Moody steals the show from her. She's a much better actress than Raffin, is (IMHO) prettier and far sexier, and has a fresh, approachable, open appeal that Raffin lacks. Robert Reed does a nice turn as the corrupt prison superintendent, and it's fun to watch Tina Louise playing the sadistic prison matron--and Lana Wood is a blast as a lesbian (ahh, where would women-in-prison movies be without them?) prison guard.
All in all, it's a fun watch if you don't take it too seriously--or seriously at all. Check it out.
All in all, it's a fun watch if you don't take it too seriously--or seriously at all. Check it out.
Seriously good women-in-chains exploitation flick that was an ABC Movie of the Week. Deb Raffin and Lynne Moody star as coeds on summer break who pick the wrong backwoods town to have car trouble in. The town is run by a demented sheriff (Chuck Connors, much more effective as a baddie here than he was in "Tourist Trap"). When the girls spurn his advances, he jails them and rapes Moody, and then arranges to have them shipped off to the local prison farm. There, they are abused by the sadistic guards (among them Tina Louise) and brutal warden (Robert Reed). They soon discover not everyone gets out of the place alive, either. Della Reese plays one of their fellow inmates. The film is harrowing and believable, even if all the guards are shapely if not beautiful women. Guards in this type of film tend to come in all shapes and sizes, the better to intimidate and beat up on the inmates. The film is all the more frightening because this stuff happens in real life, or used to. Some decent nudity and whipping and cruelty, obviously added to the video release and for the overseas market.
At closing credits the producers slight implied it as real facts without any hint or further information about such happenings, just staying clear it was on southern town, the shooting took place at Carrolton and Greenwood on Mississippi, where at first glance all authorities are corrupts exploiting of their high positions for their own benefits concerning a feminine rural prison, where the Mayor supplied his bro.thel with an underage girls imprisoned just by smallest offences under the connivance of Prison's warden.
The sadist local Sheriff (Chuck Connors who else?) that arrested two Californian girls (Deborah Raffin and Lynne Moody) just by Moody mocking him at restaurant, aftermaths ra.ped her at jail, all this at blessing of the Judge (Ralph Bellamy) that is actually his cousin always covering for his bad behavior, anyway a rotten city, the movie is a sexploitation offering, displaying a front nudity among a les.bian contrived relationship, sadly the often good girl Tina Louise scratches his fine past in this picture as heartless prison leader.
Thanks for reading.
Resume:
First watch: 1987 / How many: 2 / Source: TV-Youtube / Rating: 6.25.
The sadist local Sheriff (Chuck Connors who else?) that arrested two Californian girls (Deborah Raffin and Lynne Moody) just by Moody mocking him at restaurant, aftermaths ra.ped her at jail, all this at blessing of the Judge (Ralph Bellamy) that is actually his cousin always covering for his bad behavior, anyway a rotten city, the movie is a sexploitation offering, displaying a front nudity among a les.bian contrived relationship, sadly the often good girl Tina Louise scratches his fine past in this picture as heartless prison leader.
Thanks for reading.
Resume:
First watch: 1987 / How many: 2 / Source: TV-Youtube / Rating: 6.25.
- elo-equipamentos
- May 5, 2024
- Permalink
This television exploitation movie is certainly entertaining, but relentlessly downbeat. Exploring, how two college coeds are thrown in a Southern prison farm on trumped up charges, the film has many fine qualities. The acting by a largely recognizable cast is solid and character development is totally acceptable, but there are problems relating to the film's resolution. Unfortunately, there is absolutely no payoff for the audience. "Nightmare in Badham County" is loaded with reprehensible characters, along with two heroines who elicit tremendous sympathy. With that setup, a more upbeat conclusion might have been better. - MERK
- merklekranz
- Jan 13, 2013
- Permalink