The Swinging Barmaids
| The Swinging Barmaids | |
|---|---|
![]() Theatrical release poster by John Solie  | |
| Directed by | Gus Trikonis | 
| Written by | Charles B. Griffith | 
| Produced by | Ed Carlin | 
| Starring | 
  | 
| Cinematography | Irv Goodnoff | 
| Edited by | Jerry Cohen | 
| Music by | Don Bagley | 
Production company  | Carlin Company Productions  | 
| Distributed by | Premiere Releasing Org. | 
Release date  | 
  | 
Running time  | 88 minutes | 
| Country | United States | 
| Language | English | 
| Box office | $1,250,000 (1980 release)[1] | 
The Swinging Barmaids is a 1975 American exploitation film about a serial killer who targets cocktail waitresses. The film was directed by Gus Trikonis, and stars Bruce Watson, Laura Hippe, William Smith, and Dyanne Thorne. It was re-released in 1980 as Eager Beavers.
William Smith later recalled "Jesus Christ, that was a wild fuckin’ movie! (Laughing) Yeah, that was kind of fun."[2]
Plot
After murdering Boo-Boo, a cocktail waitress at the Swing-A-Ling Club, Tom, a psychotic killer, disguises himself and gains employment as a bouncer at the same club where he continues his killing spree. While police lieutenant Harry White attempts to stop him, Tom sets his sights on 'pure' waitress Jenny.
Cast
- Bruce Watson as Tom
 - Laura Hippe as Jenny
 - Katie Saylor as Susie
 - Renie Radich as Marie
 - William Smith as Lieutenant Harry White
 - Dyanne Thorne as "Boo-Boo"
 - Zitto Kazann as Zitto
 - Jim Travis as Dave
 - Ray Galvin as Jack
 - John Alderman as Andrews
 - Milt Kogan as Dan
 - Judith Roberts as Sally
 
Cult status
Quentin Tarantino screened the film at his festival in 2007. A critic at the screening wrote:
This flick is kind of bizarre. It’s a serial killer flick that’s not really high on the gore or suspense. It’s a sexploitation flick without much titillation. It’s a William Smith movie where he’s kind of unthreatening (until the end when he’s as badass as you want him to be). None of that means it’s a lame movie. Not at all.[3]
Shock magazine wrote "By normal critical standards, this is the dregs. But as no-budget 70s exploitation goes, this crap succeeds on every necessary level (I particularly enjoyed the crude, handheld camerawork during the murder scenes). Laced with fitfully sleazy kicks and a surprisingly energetic, corpse-laden finale, this inept flick is a wonderful example of the bad-is-good nature of drive-in cinema."[4]
See also
References
- ^ Donahue, Suzanne Mary (1987). American film distribution : the changing marketplace. UMI Research Press. p. 297. Please note figures are for rentals in US and Canada
 - ^ Poggiali, Chris (1998). "Shock Cinema Talks with the Legendary William Smith". Shock Cinema. No. 12. p. 6.
 - ^ Review of 2007 screening at Aint-It-Cool-News
 - ^ "The Swinging Barmaids". Shock Cinema. No. 13. 1998. p. 19.
 
External links
- The Swinging Barmaids at IMDb
 - The Swinging Barmaids at The New York Times
 - The Swinging Barmaids at Grindhouse Database
 - The Swinging Barmaid at TCMDB
 
 
