Savage Sisters
{{Short description|1974 film by Eddie Romero}}
{{Infobox film
| name = Savage Sisters
| image = File:Savage Sisters.jpg
| caption =
| director = Eddie Romero
| producer = {{Plainlist|
- John Ashley
- Eddie Romero
- David Cohen
}}
| writer = {{unbulleted list|H. Franco Moon|Harry Corner}}
| narrator =
| starring = {{Plainlist|
- Gloria Hendry
- John Ashley
- Sid Haig
- Eddie Garcia
- Cheri Caffaro
- Vic Díaz
- Rosanna Ortiz
- Rita Gomez
- Leopoldo Salcedo
}}
| music = Bax
| cinematography = Justo Paulino
| editing = Isagani Pastor
| studio = {{Plainlist|
- Cinema Projects International
- American International Pictures (AIP)
- Hemisphere Pictures
}}
| distributor = American International Pictures (AIP) {{small|(US)}}
| released = {{film date|1974|7}}
| runtime = 86 minutes
| country = {{unbulleted list|Philippines|United States}}
| language = English
| budget = {{USD|250,000.00}} {{small|(estimated)}}
}}
Savage Sisters is a 1974 women in prison film made in the Philippines and directed by Eddie Romero.{{Cite news|author=Thomas, K.|title=A clean-cut 'dirty, O'neil'|date=Oct 4, 1974|work=Los Angeles Times|id={{ProQuest|157709006}}}}
It was the last and most expensive of several movies actor/producer John Ashley filmed in that country.
Plot
In a revolution-torn country, 1 million US dollars is stolen by a group of revolutionaries, including Mai Ling and Jo Turner. The revolutionaries are betrayed by gang members Malavasi and One Eye, who helped them with the job, and are imprisoned.
Policewoman Lynn Jackson busts Mai Ling and Jo out of prison. Captain Morales goes after them. The women deal with a con man, W.P. Billingsley.
Everyone chases after the money. Malavasi and One Eye try to get it, but are buried up to their necks in the sand. Billingsley tries to take the money, but is overpowered by the women.
Cast
- Gloria Hendry as Lynn Jackson
- Cheri Caffaro as Jo Turner
- Rosanna Oritz as Mei Ling
- John Ashley as W. P. Billingsley
- Sid Haig as Malavasi
- Eddie Garcia as Captain Morales
- Vic Díaz as "One-Eye"
- Rita Gomez as Matron Ortega
- Leopoldo Salcedo as General Balthazar
- Dindo Fernando as Ernesto
- Angelo Ventura as Punjab
- Romeo Rivera as Raul
- Alfonso Carvajal as Ruiz
- Robert Rivera as Rocco
- Subas Herrero as Victor
Production
The film's estimated budget was $250,000.Tom Weaver, "Interview with John Ashley", Interviews with B Science Fiction and Horror Movie Makers: Writers, Producers, Directors, Actors, Moguls and Makeup, McFarland 1988 p 42{{Cite magazine|url=https://archive.org/stream/TrashCompactor0205Starbrite/Trash_Compactor_0205_%28Starbrite%29#page/n25/mode/1up/search/%22john+ashley%22|title=The John Ashley Filmography|magazine=Trash Compactor|edition=Volume 2 No. 5|page=26|year=1990|first=John|last=Lamont}}
The film's star, Gloria Hendry, later recalled, "John Ashley was a lot of fun, a very positive individual with a lot of energy. A free spirit. It was the first time I had ever gone to Manila, to the Philippines, to work... I spent three wonderful months there. I learned a lot about the country and their process of doing films."{{Cite news|author=VOGER, M.|date=Oct 20, 2006|title=BLACK BELT GLORIA|work=Asbury Park Press|id={{ProQuest|437831687}}}}
The film was originally called Ebony, Ivory and Jade and strongly featured martial arts. However, by the time the film was released, several martial arts films had not performed well, so the advertising campaign focused instead on the movie being about a Patty Hearst-type liberation army.{{cite magazine|magazine=Trash Compactor|edition=Volume 2 No. 6|url=https://archive.org/stream/TrashCompactorV2N61992/Trash%20Compactor%20v2%20n6%20%281992%29#page/n5/mode/1up/search/%22john+ashley%22|title=The John Ashley Interview Part 2|year=1992|page=6|first=John|last=Lamont}}
Reception
The Chicago Tribune said that "only the broadly comic performance of Sid Haig... breaks the monotony of it all."{{Cite news|title=Tempo/Movies |date=Sep 24, 1974|work=Chicago Tribune|id={{ProQuest|169333360}}}}
The Los Angeles Times called it "one of the better lurid potboilers to come out of the Philippines... Romero's direction is snappy... amusing as a sort of very broad live action cartoon."
Diabolique magazine wrote that Ashley was "especially fun" in the film "as a mustachioed, cigar-smoking conman type figure, doing push ups in leopard print underwear and bedding the three leads, indicating Ashley might have enjoyed a decent career as a character actor in later years had he so chosen."{{cite magazine|first=Stephen|last=Vagg|url=https://diaboliquemagazine.com/the-nine-lives-of-john-ashley/url=https://diaboliquemagazine.com/the-nine-lives-of-john-ashley/|magazine=Diabolique Magazine|title=A Hell of a Life: The Nine Lives of John Ashley|date=December 2019}}{{Dead link|date=October 2022 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }}
TV Guide described the film as follows: "a baffling picture about a group of rifle-wielding women who back a revolution on some faceless banana-republic island. Luckily, it doesn't take itself too seriously and emerges as just another of director Romero's exploitative island films."{{Cite web |title=Savage Sisters |url=https://www.tvguide.com/movies/savage-sisters/review/2030157221/ |access-date=2024-05-02 |website=TVGuide.com |language=en}}
References
{{reflist}}
External links
- {{IMDb title|0072115}}
- {{TCMDb title|89130}}
- [https://www.grindhousedatabase.com/index.php/Savage_Sisters_(1974) Savage Sisters] at Grindhouse Database
- [http://cinemasentries.com/review/savage-sisters-1974-dvd-review-filipino-exploitation-madness/ Review of film] at Cinema Sentries
- [https://www.nytimes.com/movie/review?res=9401E4D81E3CEF34BC4151DFBE66838F669EDE Review of film] at New York Times
{{Eddie Romero}}
Category:Philippine drama films
Category:Films directed by Eddie Romero
Category:Women in prison films
Category:Films shot in the Philippines
Category:Films scored by Les Baxter