Girlquake! (found action-exploitation film; 1995): Difference between revisions
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The Amazon women must make their way to Coney Island, where their Queen is. In their search for her, the end up meeting Ginger, a stripper called "Queen of Double Ds," Queen Zahara, a performer in a freak show, Chersteen, a drag queen, and a Dominatrix. | The Amazon women must make their way to Coney Island, where their Queen is. In their search for her, the end up meeting Ginger, a stripper called "Queen of Double Ds," Queen Zahara, a performer in a freak show, Chersteen, a drag queen, and a Dominatrix. | ||
[[File:Girlquake Cover (1).png|thumb|Credits from the inside cover]] | |||
==Cast and Crew== | ==Cast and Crew== |
Revision as of 23:20, 11 October 2021
Girlquake! is a film from New York artist Michael Randall.[1] The movie was a throwback to exploitation films, in particular the works of Russ Meyer.
Background
The film was made independently some time in the mid-1990s. It was praised by film critic Joe Bob Briggs in a July 1995 review.[2] Its opening scene was later recounted in the book For Women Only: Your Guide to Health Empowerment by Gary Null and Barbra Seaman.[3]
Plot
The film opens in an Arizona dinner, where a group of five Amazon women erupt from the center of the Earth. A group of men attempt to rape them but are killed, one by being drowned in a bowl of meat.
The Amazon women must make their way to Coney Island, where their Queen is. In their search for her, the end up meeting Ginger, a stripper called "Queen of Double Ds," Queen Zahara, a performer in a freak show, Chersteen, a drag queen, and a Dominatrix.
Cast and Crew
- Michael Randall as director
- Kat Walker as the leader of the Amazon women
- Chersteen as the drag queen
- Etoile Bijou as a sideshow psychic
- Kim Ryder as a Dominatrix
- Gillian Boardman "Gerrie"[4]
- The Great Fredini[5]
- Mik Cribben as Cinematographer[6]
Avalibility
The film was first discovered by YouTuber Matt Presents in December of 2020. In October 2021, Matt got in contact with director Michael Randall and received a copy of the film on DVD. According to Randall, the film played a few independent venues in New York City and Japan, but was eventually bought by underhanded distributors who never released the film.[7]
References
- ↑ Up is Up, But So is Down: New York's Downtown Literary Scene; pg. 489 Retrieved 22 Dec '20
- ↑ Joe Bob Briggs review of the film. Retrieved 22 Dec '20
- ↑ For Women Only!: Your Guide to Health Empowerment; pg. 3 Retrieved 22 Dec '20
- ↑ A website biography page on Gillian Boardman. Retrieved 22 Dec '20
- ↑ Coney Island website biography page of The Great Fredini. Retrieved 22 Dec '20
- ↑ A website biography page on Mik Cribben. Retrieved 22 Dec '20
- ↑ Video of the film being found, with interview with director. Retrieved 11 Oct '21