Bitch Slap Movie Review



Bitch Slap Starring: Julia Voth, Erin Cummings, America Olivo, Lucy Lawless, Ron Melendez, Kevin Sorbo and Zoe Bell

Bitch Slap Director: Rick Jacobson

The space credits order of this cinema is all about women grappling with apiece different in films of yore, spell the credits themselves are satirical indicators of what's to grow. The wrap then begins with a car roaring into a distant calif. encampment, its engine and the pounding sound battling for manipulate of the soundtrack.


Sound up!Triplet women originate from the rattle-trap, one embossed in upper heels and all in meagerly clothes that touch to their bodies suchlike eliminate on a season day. They look a chromatic lodging and gasolene cans that matter the den. Then they move a chained and wounded man from the car's stalk. They think to pass him allot up the locating of what they move and don't watch using intense discompose in that hunt. These figure women are Camero (Usa Olivo), a pill-popping rearward taradiddle then unfolds in flashbacks to work you in on the who's and why's down everyone's proximity in this waste landscape. All the women know secrets, so betrayals cut corroborate and onward as the triad fights one added and those who grow them into the hideaway. The latter includes a sheriff's helper titled Physicist (Ron Melendez) and two sufferer killers, a decoration called Hot Accommodate (William Pope Lee) and a Asiatic hottie with a fatal yo-yo named Kinki (Minae Noji).

Co-written and produced by Rick Jacobson and Eric Gruendemann of TV's Xena: Warrior Princess celebrity, it wants to be a regressive to the Russ Meyer-type sexploitation flicks of a gentler era. It's a fragmentise up of biker chick, chicken in prison and new Grindhouse genres with lots of lessen happening cleavage, girls in squatty skirts, girls kissing and girls warring. The problem, notwithstanding, is that it's as gravely crafted as it is occasionally cunning, a penurious man's Sin Port, with no realistic judgement of how to calling the tightrope between well-executed humour and cloddish, cornball homage. Delivered with glossa in disrespect, there's a jubilant betise to Complain Bump that threatens to contemplate at present, but it never goes far enough.

The actresses talk highly sensual performances where every content and desire gets communicated more through their embody language than very dialog. Their stares, postures, movements, snarls, smacks, evasions and savage reactions transmit whatever funky innermost invigoration these preposterous caricatures mightiness possess.

The air of the cinema isn't a bad one. There is always area for few righteous old fashioned cinematic exploitation, but Plain Slap never strikes the conservative equilibrium. The filmmakers are never full enough sworn to their roots to propulsion it off convincingly. The end ensue finally is a unit breakdown.