Love Letters Of A Portuguese Nun Youtube
Amid all of his vast (200+) and varied filmography Spanish auteur Jesus Franco does have a few standout films that almost seem to be the result of another director entirely - 'The Bloody Judge' and 'Love Letters of a Portuguese Nun' would be two that easily fit into that superior category. The Portuguese Letters were published anonymously in 1669, achieving instant success, and exciting a host of sequels and imitations. Ostensibly they were translations into French of five love letters written by a Portuguese nun to the French officer who had loved her and left her.
Women in Cellblock 9 | |
---|---|
Directed by | Jess Franco |
Produced by | Erwin C. Dietrich |
Written by | Jesús Franco |
Starring | Karine Gambier |
Music by | Walter Baumgartner |
Cinematography | Ruedi Küttel |
Edited by | Jesús Franco |
Distributed by | Elite Film |
Release date | |
Running time | 75 minutes |
Country | Switzerland |
Language | English |
Women in Cellblock 9 (German: Frauen für Zellenblock 9) is a 1977 Swiss exploitationactionhorror film written and directed by Jess Franco and starring Karine Gambier. Its main theme is women in prison.
Unlike most of Franco's work, the film remains banned in the United Kingdom due to large amounts of sexual violence and because one of the lead actresses in many of the sex scenes, Susan Hemingway, was 16 at the time the film was made. The film was rejected by the British Board of Film Classification when submitted in 2004 and has since not been successfully appealed.[1]
Plot[edit]
The film is set in a South American jungle prison during a revolution. Initially, the camp commander and the prison physician, Dr. Costa, wait for a few guards on a truck. On board are six young women. Three of them were arrested on suspicion of revolutionary activities, the other three are made available to the guards to be raped. The three detainees, Karine, Barbara, and Aida, are found shortly thereafter, naked and chained in a standing position, in the notorious Cellblock 9. Gradually, they are presented to the 'interrogation', which is supported by the doctor through various tortures. Barbara and Aida resist the torture and remain silent, Karine, however, breaks down under the torture, and some revolutionaries denounced the (unnamed) city.
In the meantime, the young indigenous student Marie also ends up in the cellblock. Allegedly, propaganda material was found on her by the insurgents. Their torture was to spend three days without food and water in a single cell. She was then taken to dinner with the commander of the doctor, where they have oral sex in order to then get a little sip of salty Champagne.
After the four women in Cellblock 9 again are forging among themselves, they devise a plan to contact their contacts in the capital. The quartet manages to distract the guard in order to knock him out and flee with his rifle. Shortly after leaving the cellblock, Aida is killed in a gunfight with another guard who is also killed. The other three flee into the jungle, where Barbara has been shot and they progress slowly. They make it to an old temple, where they feel safe and remove the bullet from Barbara's shoulder. Karine and Marie go into the jungle to look for food, but the guards find their trail and meet them at the temple. As Barbara is killed, the other two, alerted by her screams, run back to the temple and are suddenly confronted by the camp commander and the doctor (surrounded by prison guards). In a last desperate action Karine attempts to steal the commander's pistol. When she fails to pull the trigger, the commander gives the order to fire and the last two prisoners are struck down on the spot. With the desecration of the corpses, the film ends.
Cast[edit]
- Karine Gambier as Karine
- Howard Vernon as Dr. Milton
- Susan Hemingway as Maria
- Aida Gouveia as Aida Moret
- Esther Studer as Barbara
- Dora Doll as Loba
- Cesar Anahory as Guard
Release[edit]
The film was first released in West Germany on 17 March 1978. In addition to its original title, the film is also known as Escape from the Island of Death. In English-speaking countries it is also known as Tropical Inferno and Women in Cellblock 9.
References[edit]
- ^'Women in Cellblock 9 Rejected by the BBFC'. 24 February 2004. Archived from the original on 13 December 2013.
External links[edit]
- Women in Cellblock 9 on IMDb
- Women in Cellblock 9 at Rotten Tomatoes
Learn about this topic in these articles:
Alcoforado
- In Mariana Alcoforado
…long believed to have written Lettres portugaise (1669; “Portuguese Letters”), a collection of five love letters, though most modern authorities reject her authorship.
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discussed in biography
- In Gabriel-Joseph de Lavergne, viscount of Guilleragues
…be the author of the Lettres portugaises (1669; “Portuguese Letters”).
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Portuguese literature
Love Letters Of A Portuguese Nun Full Movie Youtube
- In Portuguese literature: The 17th century and the Baroque
The Love Letters of a Portuguese Nun) introduced a literary mystery that would enchant readers for centuries. These five short letters, purportedly translated into French from lost originals, were presented as love letters; they were later attributed to Mariana Alcoforado, a Portuguese nun who was…
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