|
Chained Girls A Twilight Tale of the Third Sex "Lesbians have their variations from one group to another. There are those women who are cultured and refined who sneak away to some dirty bar in order to find a trampish-looking woman to make love to. Some women break up homes, forsake children for the love of another woman. Then there are the teenage lesbian or baby butch. They roam the big city streets in large gangs assaulting everyone who falls within their path. Some of the weapons they use run the gamut of fists, lead pipes, chains. Many of these girls eventually end up as drug addicts, alcoholics, and prostitutes...Regardless of what the lesbian does or where she goes, her life is a very difficult one. She, like her male counterpart, leads a very lonely and despairing life." (Chained Girls) Welcome to the amusing and disturbing world of lesbian pulp! The preceding was a quote from Chained Girls (1965), a black-and-white film I discovered thanks to the Something Weird Video collection. It stands as a classic example of sexploitation films, and yet as a lesbian-themed exploitation film, it is also heavily indebted to the explosion of lesbian pulp fiction novels in the 1950s and ‘60s, qualifying as a type of lesbian pulp film. One of the ways authors and filmmakers of this conservative era avoided obscenity charges when dealing with homosexual subject matter was to couch their exploration of sexual deviance in scientific terms. Chained Girls writer-director Joseph Mawra uses this tactic, creating a film that is part pseudo-documentary and part pure pornography. Hence quotes from Freud and serious statistics compiled from medical journals are liberally interspersed with gratuitous shots of topless women rolling around on top of each other. The film's stated purpose is to define the lesbian for the general public, for both "preventative education" ("Only through understanding the facts can we keep lesbianism from becoming a serious social problem"), and, more to the point, sheer titillation. Chained Girls begins by asking in an authoritative male voiceover: "Who and what is a lesbian? Is lesbianism a disease or a natural occurrence? Is lesbianism reserved for only a few people, or is it a common happening? How do lesbians live? Are they happy with their lives?"
Hence lesbianism is presented as a kind of invisible threat potentially lurking in the most unsuspected places a not uncommon metaphor from the paranoid McCarthy red-scare era. The film goes so far as to maintain that "quite often the boundaries of female homosexuality are so vague, that women slip into lesbianism without realizing that they're lesbian." So not only is your neighbour or coworker a potential pervert, but so are you, even if you think you're normal. This unnerving Gothic fear is key to many representations of homosexuality from the time. The cultural paranoia surrounding homosexuality is clearly spelled out in the climactic scene of the film, which purports to be a dramatization of what occurs at a lesbian's "coming out" party. With insinuations of witchcraft, several women sit around a large conference table to decide the fate of the new debutante into their "love-cult" of "the daughters of Sappho." What follows is a violent gang-rape. This final violence appears inevitable with lesbians, echoed in other 1960s lesbian-themed sexploitation films, such as Peter Woodcock's Dominique: Daughter of Lesbos (1967), where the last scene also depicts a group of witch-like lesbians sitting around a conference table deciding the fate of someone, although this time it is a straight male rapist and his punishment is castration upon a cross.
November 2002 | Issue 38 Melissa Sky is completing a dissertation on lesbian pulp fiction at McMaster University in Canada and she is working on Women in Sinema, a documentary of women in sexploitation films. ACCESS: Something Weird, natch. Duke University's "Women in the Shadows" website has loads of lesbian pulp related material. ALSO: More exploitation and gay and lesbian cinema |
![]()
New book from the
editor and writers of
Bright Lights Film Journal
Action! Interviews with Directors
from Classical Hollywood to
Contemporary Iran
(Anthem Art and Culture),
by Gary Morris (Editor),
Bert Cardullo (Introduction),
Jonathan Rosenbaum (Foreword).
London and New York:
Anthem Press, 2009.
"I dare anyone to squeeze between
two covers a more varied, useful and
flat out entertaining sampling of
the personalities that make the
seventh art the liveliest."
David Hudson, IFC.com
Interviews
Robert Bresson
Roger Corman (with Bruce Dern
and David Carradine)
Allan Dwan
Clint Eastwood
Douglas Sirk
Robert Wise
Mania Akbari
Lars von Trier
Michael Haneke
Allie Light
Melvin and Mario van Peebles
Otto Muehl
The Brothers Quay
Barbara Kopple
Federico Fellini
Abbas Kiarostami
François Truffaut
Caveh Zahedi
Peter Bogdanovich and
Joseph McBride
on Orson Welles