Doris Wishman Movies

Nudist camps, transsexuals, penis transplants, exploding breasts...these are the plot devices that distinguish the work of the woman who ranks as one of the most prolific female directors in film history. Doris Wishman worked solely in the realm of adults-only pictures, stuffing more than two dozen films with nudity, simulated sex, and other exploitable elements. A fiercely independent director, Wishman wrote, produced, and distributed most of her films herself (often using pseudonyms to conceal her one-woman show). Her idiosyncratic style, lurid subjects, and low budgets have kept her movies under the radar of mainstream tastes, but a devoted cult has grown that appreciates her bizarre tales of sexual tension.
Originally trained as an actress (a classmate was Shelley Winters), Wishman first found work in film distribution. After the death of her first husband, she decided she needed to take her mind off the loss and embarked upon production of her premiere film, Hideout in the Sun (1960). Financed by a loan from her sister, it was the first of several nudist colony films that Wishman would make over the next four years. While not the only filmmaker exploiting the legality of nudity set within such camps, Wishman often supplied more imaginative plots than her peers, such as Nude on the Moon (1961), which concerned a pair of amateur astronauts who discover an idyllic paradise of naked beauties on the lunar surface.
When the innocent aura of the nudist film began to lose favor at the box office, Wishman followed pervading trends and moved to a darker, more violent style. In films like Bad Girls Go to Hell (1965), Another Day, Another Man (1966), and Indecent Desires (1967), stark black-and-white photography and hand-held camerawork added unsettling touches to stories of sexual obsession, rape, degradation, and murder. While supplying the brief moments of nudity that her grindhouse audiences demanded, Wishman was also serving up a paranoid vision of womanhood that revolved around frustration and repression. Wishman's sole intent was to titillate her viewers and turn a profit, but these films had a different flavor than the "roughies" made by her male counterparts and they remain her most interesting work.
As the next decade dawned, Wishman changed again with the times and allowed her pictures to become more sexually explicit and thematically wild. The Amazing Transplant (1970) followed the sexual and criminal exploits of a man who goes insane after having his dead friend's penis grafted onto him. Two of Wishman's best-known films from this period star the massively endowed Chesty Morgan, a Polish stripper with a 73" bust. Deadly Weapons (1973) found her avenging a lover's death by smothering those responsible with her tremendous chest. Double Agent 73 (1974) cast Morgan as a spy with a secret camera concealed in one breast that will self-destruct if her mission isn't completed on time. Let Me Die a Woman (1978) was a unique (if factually suspect) documentary about sex change operations, complete with graphic surgery footage, simulated sex scenes, and actual nude transsexuals displaying their refashioned genitalia. Wishman avoided pornographic detail in these films, instead opting to please her viewers with outrageous scenarios and copious nudity. Despite her distaste for hardcore, Wishman reportedly helmed a few full-on porn titles in the mid-'70s, though the director has disowned these productions.
With adult cinema focused squarely on gynecological close-ups, Wishman decided to follow a new exploitation angle. She began work on A Night to Dismember (1983), a gory slasher film that might have provided a new career path. Unfortunately, the movie took several years to complete, thanks to budgetary concerns and a bizarre incident in which a disgruntled photo lab employee destroyed a large portion of the negative. Wishman finished the film against all odds, refashioning the story with outtakes and overdubbed narration. The result is an incomprehensible, yet uniquely surreal take on the splatter genre. The film was barely released, and Wishman retired in its wake.
Wishman's films have gained a new audience in recent years amongst cult film fanatics who are drawn to the director's unique visual and narrative style. Each film is filled with non sequitur close-ups of lamps, ashtrays, and other mundane household items. Plots move sluggishly (or not at all), jumping suddenly to violent, dreamlike twists in logic. There is a strange focus on her characters' feet and jittery hand-held cinematography. While initially disorienting to viewers accustomed to mainstream films, Wishman's bizarre non-techniques are so recognizable in all of her work that they become endearing. Her career resurrected by retrospective screenings of her productions at film festivals, Wishman returned to directing, releasing Satan Was a Lady (1999, not to be confused with her 1975 porn feature of the same title) and Dildo Heaven (2001). ~ Fred Beldin, All Movie Guide
2001  
 
B-movie auteur Doris Wishman is responsible for the exploitation flick Satan Was a Lady. Cleo Irane (Honey Lauren) is a frequently naked dominatrix who gets paid a large sum of money from a rich client. She then dumps her boyfriend and spends her time at a strip club, showcasing the talents of Lindsey Amodeo and Kerry Johnston. Satan Was a Lady won Doris Wishman a special jury prize for her comeback at the 2001 New York Underground Film Festival. ~ Andrea LeVasseur, All Movie Guide

Read More

Starring:
Honey LaurenGlyn Styler, (more)
2001  
 
Add Schlock! The Secret History of American Movies to QueueAdd Schlock! The Secret History of American Movies to top of Queue
Pauline Kael once wrote that since movies were so rarely great art, if one weren't interested in great trash, there wasn't much reason to pay attention to them, and one could reasonably argue that few periods brought us more top-quality cinematic trash than the 1950s and '60s. With drive-ins and grindhouses across the United States making room for low-budget exploitation films of all stripes (such as horror, science fiction, teen exploitation, biker films, beach pictures, nudies, and much more) as the major studios were focusing their attention on big-budget blockbusters and television, this was a boom time for inspired trash, and Schlock! The Secret History of American Movies takes a look at the low-budget wonders of the 1950s and '60s, as well as the men and women who made them and the social and psychological subtexts lurking behind many of these movies. Schlock! includes interviews with Roger Corman, Peter Bogdanovich, David F. Friedman, Doris Wishman, Samuel Z. Arkoff, Dick Miller, Vampira, and more. ~ Mark Deming, All Movie Guide

Read More

1983  
 
Add A Night to Dismember to QueueAdd A Night to Dismember to top of Queue
As Detective O'Malley (played by an uncredited actor, lucky guy) tells it, the entire Kent clan is slayed one at a time by a hatchet-wielding maniac that may be Vicki Kent (Samantha Fox). Vicki is back after having spent time in an insane asylum for murder, so it wasn't a very good idea for her brother Billy (Bill Szarka) and sister Mary (Diane Cummins) to try to drive her crazy so she'd be returned to the institution. As O'Malley follows the trail of bodies, he comes to believe that perhaps Vicki isn't the murderer after all. ~ Buzz McClain, All Movie Guide

Read More

1981  
R  
Looking for the perfect biological father, a lesbian couple attempts to have a child after they are refused adoption privileges. ~ Kristie Hassen, All Movie Guide

Read More

Starring:
Patty DukeSara Botsford, (more)
1978  
 
Add Let Me Die a Woman to QueueAdd Let Me Die a Woman to top of Queue
Exploitation queen Doris Wishman directs this documentary-style grindhouse epic that explores the curious medical phenomenon known as "gender dysphoria" and affords steely-nerved viewers the opportunity to witness firsthand a medically performed gender transformation from man to woman. In addition to numerous interviews with post-ops, drag-queens, and bull-dykes, this unflinching look at the culture of gender-bending also explores the sexual mysteries of the transsexual cult and restores the notorious "chisel" scene previously censored in the original U.S. theatrical release. ~ Jason Buchanan, All Movie Guide

Read More

1970  
 
In this amusing sexploitation "roughie," cult director Doris Wishman prefigures her two secret agent sex-films with Chesty Morgan (Double Agent 73 and Deadly Weapons). Sandy, Nancy and Ginny are three attractive young women who discover that they are long-lost sisters when their mysterious mother is murdered. It turns out that she was a Mata Hari-like spy, Agent 73 of the A.I.C.. She leaves them a gorgeous mansion and guarantees each a million dollars if they can avenge her strangulation murder within one year. The rest of the brief running time is spent hunting for the killer, which -- in a Wishman film -- means that the heroines get to lick bananas, do naked dances, and have sex with many ugly, hirsute men. Just to keep viewers interested, a man has his throat slashed with a razor, another gets a pitchfork in the back, a cripple is shot, and a woman gets stabbed with garden-shears before being hung naked from a showerhead. Wishman includes some interesting vintage Vegas street-scenes, and porn star Levi Richards appears briefly. For a zero-budget sexploitation film, The Immoral Three is not bad, and it is certainly not Wishman's worst. ~ Robert Firsching, All Movie Guide

Read More

1970  
R  
Add Deadly Weapons to QueueAdd Deadly Weapons to top of Queue
Extremely top-heavy exotic dancer Chesty Morgan (billed on screen as Zsa Zsa, though the name Chesty Morgan appeared in all the film's advertising) made her screen debut in this wildly improbable crime story written and directed by Doris Wishman. Crystal (Morgan) is an advertising executive who has fallen in love with Larry (Greg Reynolds), a hoodlum working for a mysterious crime boss with a trademark scar on his right hand. While ransacking the home of a rival gangster, Larry finds and pockets an address book which will provide him plenty of blackmail material on his colleagues; when two of them, smart-suited and mustachioed Tony (Harry Reems, whose name is misspelled "Harry Reemes" in the credits) and one-eyed Captain Hook suspect Larry is holding out on them, they kill him and set out to find the book. However, Larry already gave it to Crystal for safe keeping, and when she learns her man is dead, she sets out to find Tony and Hook and get revenge. Inexperienced with a gun, Crystal kills her enemies using the weapons nature gave her -- she smothers men with her massive 73-inch bust. Deadly Weapons was a commercial breakthrough for Doris Wishman, who had been making low-budget sexploitation films since 1960; Wishman and Morgan would team up again for Double Agent 73. ~ Mark Deming, All Movie Guide

Read More

1970  
 
Perhaps the most outrageous of cult director Doris Wishman's many forays into the sexploitation genre, this film begins with a nude woman playing a zither and just gets more bizarre from there. The woman's boyfriend, Arthur (Juan Fernandez) tries to have sex with her, but his fury at his own impotence drives him to strangle her to death. Arthur eventually receives a transplant of a dying playboy's estimable penis, but that doesn't stop his killing spree. Rape, murder, and lesbianism are the featured attractions in this horrific low-budget roughie, which features an early softcore appearance by porn legend Kim Pope. Wishman returned with The Immoral Three (1970). ~ Robert Firsching, All Movie Guide

Read More

1967  
 
Bobi (Layla Peters) gets a call from Hannah (Cleo Nova), a girl she met while vacationing in Europe and became "very friendly" with. Hannah is in town but can't find a hotel room, so Bobi invites her to stay in the apartment she shares with Carol (Darlene Bennett) while she visits. She is grateful, but strangely distracted. Two men come to the door, claiming to be from "the plumbing company," but once inside they pull guns and announce that Hannah has some information they want. It turns out that she's the secretary for the prime minister of a European country who will be visiting the hotel across the street. They pistol whip her until she tells them that her boss will be arriving at six o'clock the next morning, so the hoodlums set up camp in the apartment and wait for their chance to assassinate the dignitary. While Nick (Michael Lawrence) is threatening and all business, his partner Frankie (Buck Starr) takes time out to romance Carol, promising to take her away with him to South America after he collects his payment for the job. The two of them attempt to make love while everyone else sleeps, but Nick awakens and angrily interferes. After a lesbian dream sequence, a desperate seduction, and a brutal rape, the zero hour arrives and the killers professionally execute their hit, though there's an extra complication they didn't plan on. ~ Fred Beldin, All Movie Guide

Read More

1965  
 
Cult filmmaker Doris Wishman moved from nudist-camp films to exploitation roughies with this depressing melodrama. The plot concerns a woman who moves from Ohio to Manhattan, only to discover the harsh realities of life in the big city. She goes from waitress to prostitute, and ends up loathing herself so much that she turns down a good-hearted man's offer of marriage. Wishman also narrates this gritty tale, which is unremarkable except for being the feature debut of actor Tony LoBianco. ~ Robert Firsching, All Movie Guide

Read More

1965  
 
Exploitation filmmaker Doris Wishman directed this peculiar black-and-white roughie about the travails of a blushing bride named Meg (Gigi Darlene). After her husband leaves her, she is forced to kill her building's janitor-rapist in self-defense. The panicked Meg flees to New York under an assumed name and picks up a drunken lout who beats her with a belt, then she moves in with a lesbian. As the dragnet tightens, Meg moves to an apartment and is attacked by the landlady's husband and finally ends up working for an elderly woman whose son is the detective assigned to the janitor's murder. Wishman's bizarre film is almost surreal in style, with the requisite circular ending and aimless photography popular in art-house features of the time. Virtually impossible to see for many years, Bad Girls Go to Hell has gained a cult following on videotape for its campy, melodramatic elements and even received some theatrical playdates in the late 1990s. ~ Robert Firsching, All Movie Guide

Read More

1963  
 
Cult filmmaker Doris Wishman directed this mondo-style nudie documentary showcasing various exotic dancers around the world. Louis Prima's Las Vegas twist segments are among the tame -- but historically interesting -- numbers which set up a silly conclusion in which Floridian nudists perform various dances in the buff. Other segments center on Europe, Hawaii, and Japan. The film should be of interest primarily to nudie and burlesque completists, as fans of Wishman's uniquely bizarre sex-dramas are unlikely to find the events very interesting. ~ Robert Firsching, All Movie Guide

Read More

1960  
 
Jeff (William Mayer) is a brilliant, dedicated young rocket scientist who wants to be the first man on the moon, so much so that when his uncle dies and leaves him three million dollars, he immediately begins planning his voyage. He enlists the Professor (Lester Brown) to help him build the homemade rocket ship that will take them both to the moon, though the older, wiser man thinks Jeff should be more interested in love and marriage. So does Cathy (Marietta), Jeff's lovelorn secretary, who stays late every night just to be near him. The two men take off for the moon, excited about their mission, but run into strange interference. A meteor shower rocks the capsule and both are knocked unconscious. When they awaken, they put on their space suits and venture outside into a strange, alien world. The vegetation is lush and green and fat gold nuggets are strewn through the grass like dandelions. There is also a race of moon people, who look just like people on earth, except for their antennae and the fact that everyone is nude from the waist up. The Queen of the Moon (Marietta again) permits the Earth men to continue with their scientific expedition, and they explore and document this idyllic world of nudist moon girls playing space ball. But the flora specimens and racy photographs aren't enough for Jeff when it's time to leave; he has fallen in love with the Queen of the Moon and refuses to return to the Earth. ~ Fred Beldin, All Movie Guide

Read More

1960  
 
Stripper Blaze Starr portrays herself in this popular nudist-camp film from cult-director Doris Wishman, who also appears briefly. Starr's agent becomes miffed at the ecdysiast for spending all of her time at a nudist colony when she's supposed to be working. The usual nude badminton, swimming, and archery are highlighted in full color, and Ms. Starr's ample charms are prominently displayed. Ralph Young sings the title song with music by Doc Severinson's orchestra and also appears as Andy, the director of the nudist colony. ~ Robert Firsching, All Movie Guide

Read More

BLOCKBUSTER name, design and related marks are trademarks of Blockbuster Inc. © 2009 Blockbuster Inc. All rights reserved.

Portions of Content Provided by All Movie Guide ®, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC.© 2009 All Media Guide, LLC.