Lynn Stevens
- Policewoman
- (as Linda L'Amour)
Jack Webb
- Telephone Repairman
- (as Chris Kissen)
Eric Edwards
- Guy in Car
- (sin créditos)
Judith Hamilton
- Vagrant
- (sin créditos)
Cindy West
- Wife
- (sin créditos)
Argumento
¿Sabías que…?
- ErroresDuring the first lesbian scene, in wide shots of the jail cell in the beginning, naked male prisoner was sleeping under the bunk, while during his close-ups, he was on the bunk and awake. At the end of the scene when the naked female is put in the prison, the male prisoner was again sleeping under the bunk like before in almost the same position.
- Citas
Policewoman: I can only see out of your windows but... like this is assaulting an officer. You know you could get ten years for this.
Guy in Car: No, no, no, this is rape, baby.
Policewoman: Yeah, but this is against the penis, uh, the penal code.
- ConexionesSpoofs Badge 373 (1973)
Opinión destacada
I'm a long-time Leslie Murray fan, having met the actress on a p.a. tour back in Cleveland in 1979. This is one of her better vehicles, an all-sex quickie, but arousing nonetheless.
It's been reissued on Vol. 111 of Something Weird's Dragon Art Theatre series, and along with its all-sex co-feature AVALON CALLING makes up one of the better packages in that bunch.
Murray, credited under her Linda L'Amour pseudonym, toplines as a NYC cop, with the "Dragnet" theme playing. It's amusing that in the supporting cast, is journeyman porn actor Jack Webb (credited as usual under his nom de film Chris Kissen) -probably a coincidence or somebody at Porn Central Casting was on the ball.
She arrests drunk vagrant Marc Stevens sleeping on a park bench and as usual the film turns to improv "comedy" as he hams it up, replete with Top Hat prop. It's not long before Murray gives him a b.j.
Her next encounter is when a phony phone repairman shows up at the jail and rapes her at knife point. Stevens masturbates in his cell watching them and a pattern develops, as about half the money shots in the movie are faked.
Judith Hamilton is picked up by Leslie as a panhandler, cueing lesbian action at the station house, and later she's locked up with Stevens to generate a straight sex scene.
En route to breaking up a domestic disturbance, Leslie is waylaid by a very young Eric Edwards, who throws her into the back seat of his limo and has his way with her. By this time it's a rape in name only, since Murray is very enthusiastic in helping him get off. Director "Roger Stud" stages this sequence in an extremely unconvincing manner, with a set representing the back seat which is way too large and brightly lit to be real.
She finally arrives when Cindy West has already reconciled with her bickering old man, resulting in an impromptu threesome. Open ending to these vignettes implies that a series of Leslie the cop movies could have resulted.
As a Murray fan I was willing to indulge the sloppy filmmaking here, but even her flubbed lines are left in - no retakes allowed.
Musical score is mainly tacky '30s pseudo-jazz, similar to but inferior to the typical Dick Hyman-conjured Woody Allen movie accompaniment. This format is varied at times, with an appropriate rendition of "I Fought the Law and the Law Won" as well as Dizzy Gillespie playing "A Night in Tunisia" near film's end. Lensing is pro, by NYC vet C. Davis Smith.
It's been reissued on Vol. 111 of Something Weird's Dragon Art Theatre series, and along with its all-sex co-feature AVALON CALLING makes up one of the better packages in that bunch.
Murray, credited under her Linda L'Amour pseudonym, toplines as a NYC cop, with the "Dragnet" theme playing. It's amusing that in the supporting cast, is journeyman porn actor Jack Webb (credited as usual under his nom de film Chris Kissen) -probably a coincidence or somebody at Porn Central Casting was on the ball.
She arrests drunk vagrant Marc Stevens sleeping on a park bench and as usual the film turns to improv "comedy" as he hams it up, replete with Top Hat prop. It's not long before Murray gives him a b.j.
Her next encounter is when a phony phone repairman shows up at the jail and rapes her at knife point. Stevens masturbates in his cell watching them and a pattern develops, as about half the money shots in the movie are faked.
Judith Hamilton is picked up by Leslie as a panhandler, cueing lesbian action at the station house, and later she's locked up with Stevens to generate a straight sex scene.
En route to breaking up a domestic disturbance, Leslie is waylaid by a very young Eric Edwards, who throws her into the back seat of his limo and has his way with her. By this time it's a rape in name only, since Murray is very enthusiastic in helping him get off. Director "Roger Stud" stages this sequence in an extremely unconvincing manner, with a set representing the back seat which is way too large and brightly lit to be real.
She finally arrives when Cindy West has already reconciled with her bickering old man, resulting in an impromptu threesome. Open ending to these vignettes implies that a series of Leslie the cop movies could have resulted.
As a Murray fan I was willing to indulge the sloppy filmmaking here, but even her flubbed lines are left in - no retakes allowed.
Musical score is mainly tacky '30s pseudo-jazz, similar to but inferior to the typical Dick Hyman-conjured Woody Allen movie accompaniment. This format is varied at times, with an appropriate rendition of "I Fought the Law and the Law Won" as well as Dizzy Gillespie playing "A Night in Tunisia" near film's end. Lensing is pro, by NYC vet C. Davis Smith.
- lor_
- 13 mar 2011
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