Showing posts with label Helmut Berger. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Helmut Berger. Show all posts

Monday, July 11, 2011

Salon Kitty (Tinto Brass, 1976)

One of the complaints I had about the last Nazi exploitation film I watched, Ilsa: She Wolf of the SS, was that the skirts worn by the female SS guards weren't tailored right (they were too long, and, much to my chagrin, completely slit-free). Call my brain structure ill-conceived, but I think the reason there were so many garment issues peppered throughout that film might have had something to do with the fact that the director wasn't Italian. In other words, only someone of Italian extraction, scratch that, only someone who was born and raised in Italy, is in the position to properly comprehend the importance of perversion when it comes to ladies apparel. Well, you know what? Filmmaker Tinto Brass is Italian, and with his Salon Kitty, Nazi couture finally gets its cinematic due. Of course, there's little doubt in my mind that certain members of the audience will be offended by this movie, which at times seems to be masquerading as some kind of fascistic fashion show, but for those who appreciate things that are frightfully du jour, this film is the awkward tribute to totalitarian chic you've been waiting for. I've said once and I'll say it again, the only reason Nazism was in anyway popular as a movement was because of their uniforms. And not those brown, terribly drab outfits they sported during their early days, no, I'm talking about the iconic/infamous all-black uniforms worn by members of the SS (Schutzstaffel), the movement's notorious paramilitary force. They made the person wearing them seem cool, despite the fact that he or she was probably the complete opposite of cool, yet it was this perceived coolness that usually lead them to have delusions of grandeur.

These delusions manifest themselves in an ambitious SS officer named Helmut Wallenberg (Helmut Berger), who devises a convoluted plan to screw over his fellow Nazis by creating a secret army of slutty spies. It's 1939, war is about to officially start, so Helmut decides to close down the Salon Kitty, a popular Berlin brothel run by Kitty Kellerman (Ingrid Thulin), and open his own in the countryside. The plan is to deport its racially diverse staff and replace them with SS-approved hotties. Since the dapper national socialist doesn't know anything about the day-to-day operations of your typical house of ill repute, he decides to let Kitty run it (her expertise when it comes to whore management is second to none). Despite the fact that "fresh air makes her dizzy" (she prefers champagne), Kitty agrees to run Helmut's Nazi cathouse. Of course, she doesn't know that Helmut is using the brothel to eavesdrop on the clientele (all the rooms are bugged).

Taking a break from watching men fence without pants, Helmut, and his odd-looking henchmen, audition twenty SS women to work at his Aryans only bordello. Culled from every corner of Germany, the women are marched into a large room and told disrobe en masse. This session is designed to rid the women of the inhibitions (if they make the cut, there's a lot of strange dick in their future). If you thought the women removed their tan stockings a little too quickly, don't worry, there's plenty of stocking-based content to come. Anyway, while their uniforms were hitting the floor, Helmut was busy eyeballing Margherita (Teresa Ann Savoy), a dedicated Nazi with a deceptively small bum.

While there's nothing sexier than watching a large group of naked Nazi chicks marching in unison, the opposite is true when an equally large group of SS men are seen doing the exact same thing. You see, an SS officer without his black uniform is nothing more than a lumpy mound of disgusting pig flesh. The second you take it away, the male Nazi, whether they be an Obersturmbannführer or a Hauptsturmführer, loses his primary source of power. You could say that this happens to the majority of men when faced with the prospect of being completely naked, but it seems to be worse when it occurs to men who are trying to project an air of strength to the world. Instead of commanding respect and admiration, the untoward dangling produced by the misshapen quagmire festering between their legs is more likely to induce derisive laughter. Rather than bombing munitions factories during the war, the Allies should have concentrated their firepower on the textile plants that manufactured their uniforms. Think about it: millions of lives could have been saved had they only targeted their sense of style.

In order to find out the sexual constitution of the SS women, each is paired with a naked SS man. What transpires next could best be described as a Nazi orgy, as the screen is filled with a glut of uncut penises thrusting in the vicinity of twenty untamed vaginas. After the orgy, the SS women are each put in a room and paired with an individual that the Nazi leadership considers unsavoury. Forced to copulate with amputees, dwarves, the mentally ill, and lesbians, you're either "approved" or "rejected," depending on the quality of your performance. If, for example, you recoil in horror to having your clitoris licked by another woman, you're out. But if you manage to mount the mangled member of a legless man with a modicum of gusto, then you're in. Who else, by the way, was disturbed by Olga's reaction to having her genitals serviced by a professional lesbian? Call me an old fashioned dyke, but I thought she lucked out by getting paired with a lesbian. You'd have thought she had been paired with a troglodytic man-beast judging by the extreme nature of her negative reaction.

Selecting Margherita for his Nazi whore squad, despite the fact she kneed the gaunt Jewish man she was paired with in the balls (an action that should have gotten her not-so tiny ass "rejected"), Helmut invites her over to his swanky pad (his walk-in closet was to die for), and proceeds to smother his face in her lingerie-adjacent minge. The build up to the actual smothering was tantalizing in its own right, in that, I liked the way Helmut Berger, his red swastika scarf jauntily wrapped around his neck, projected his depraved authority over he by yelling the following: "Take off your panties!" "Pull up your skirt!" "Higher!" and my personal favourite, "Crawl faster!"

With the war in Europe officially underway, Kitty slips on her black stockings and puts on a spirited show for her deformed regulars (the crowd is awash with monocles and faces covered with giant birthmarks) for the last time at her old location. It's time to move, and time inspect to the fresh meat. Unimpressed by what she sees, Kitty finds the appearance of the German girls Helmut has provided to be too hard (she prefers soft). Undaunted, Kitty takes what she's been given and proceeds to unleash what I consider to be the mother of all eyebrow plucking montages. Realizing almost immediately that something truly amazing was about to transpire the moment the first furry labia is slapped with powder, Kitty conducts a kind of lingerie kindergarten. A crash course in how to make fascists fabulous, Kitty and her crack team of Dorothy-friendly underlings take the glum skanks in waiting and transform them into objects of forbidden desire.

Even though the onslaught of facials, lipstick, pube trimming, stockings, eyeliner, bobbed wigs, eyebrow pencils, blush, nail polish, and garter belts caused me to start hyperventilating near the halfway point, I would still classify the dizzying array of feminine delights on display during this particular sequence to be the reason this montage turned out to be one of the greatest in movie history.

It's opening night at the new and improved Salon Kitty, and the SS girls find themselves thigh-deep in Nazi cock right out of the gate. In a sequence replete with whips, chains, irregular dildos, stockings, cigarettes, garters, champagne and spanking, the neophyte whores do an excellent job establishing their floozy street cred. Well, not quite, an SS girl turned undercover hooker named Susan (Rosemarie Lindt), the owner of the shapeliest backside in all of Nazi Germany, did screw up when she decided to laugh at a general's predilection for frilly pink underwear (whores, undercover or otherwise, should always try to refrain from mocking the fetishes of their clients).

Meanwhile, Margherita and a pilot on leave from the Polish front named Hans (Bekim Fehmiu) have grown found of one another. The reason Helmut has bugged all the rooms (he has a team of flunkies listening around the clock) is because he doesn't trust the girls to make accurate reports of all the treasonous pillow talk they overhear. Disfranchised by the war, Hans openly shares his disdain for Hitler and Nazism in general, but Margherita fails to include his negative comments in her report (she doesn't know the rooms are bugged). Knowing that Margherita is hiding things from him, Helmut, instead of confronting her, decides to force her to have sex with his wife (Tina Aumont) on his couch. When he tires of watching their tan stockings intertwined with one another, he shows Margherita the contents of his spacious closet.

If Helmut seems overly proud of his wardrobe, that's because he is. And why wouldn't he be? I mean, have you seen what he's got in there? A veritable fascist wonderland full of capes, garish medals, leather trousers, jackboots, skintight numbers that defy description, and lots of furs, Helmut Wallenberg has to be the most fashion conscious Nazi the Third Reich has ever seen (he must get his uniforms custom made). Don't tell anyone this, but I nearly fainted when I saw that the swastika armband attached to his black and white trench-coat was covered in sparkles. I liked how he was able to change his outfit three times while still managing to focus his energy on Margherita's stunning vagina. Hey, say what you will about his prickly personality, the man loves fashion and pussy.

The gorgeous Paola Senatore (Emanuelle in America) may only have two scenes where she vocalizes actual dialogue (she plays an SS girl named Marika), but the one where stands up to Helmut was one of the film's most memorable non-lingerie scenes (another being the one where a Nazi girl crushes the wind up toy of a Jewish boy at an aquarium - even the fish were like, what a hosebeast). Since I don't want to go into much detail about the particulars of the scene, I'll just say that I loved the way Paola ignored the cruel gibberish spewing out of Helmut's mouth and kept saying, "It's mine," over and over again.

The great RuPaul once said, "We're born naked, and the rest is drag." This nugget of wisdom could also be applied to Ingrid Thulin's animated turn as Kitty Kellermann, the world's most enthusiastic brothel keeper. Boasting the temperament of a nonsensical drag queen and the fashion sense of visually impaired ragpicker, Ingrid's performance is camp personified. The word "fabulous" might seem like an apt way to describe Ingrid's work in Salon Kitty, but even it doesn't even come close to doing it justice. Singing, dancing, slapping, crying, writhing, yelling, drinking, and eating (she angrily bites a chunk out of a discarded bread-based dildo at one point), Ingrid Thulin does it all. My crotch-centric inclinations may have been all about Rosemarie Lindt and her ample behind, but my inner dandy was secretly longing to go shopping with Ingrid.

This may sound deluded, but when Rosemarie and Ingrid started slapping one another (Rosemarie took exception to being called a whore), I imagined they were fighting for my affection: Rosemarie: He's mine! He's one of the few people who appreciates the largeness of my stunning ass. Ingrid: What are you nuts? He obviously prefers to be with me. I mean, have you seen his wrists? They're so dainty, and the dainty wristed can't help but flock to my box. (End scene.)

You wouldn't think this–you know, with the amount of nudity in this film–but the costume budget on Salon Kitty must have been through the roof. How do I know this? Well, for starters, I have eyes. And secondly, when you factor in the cost of the lingerie (even the male characters wear it), Helmut Berger's Nazi originals, and Ingrid Thulin's impractical yet eye-catching ensembles, we're talking mucho dollareedoos. The only instance where they probably saved money was when costume designers Jost Jakob and Ugo Pericoli neglected to make fencing pants (the fencers in the fencing scene don't wear fencing pants).

One of the ways I used to waste time was to peruse the Men-at-Arms section in the World's Biggest Bookstore. It's true, spending an entire afternoon flipping through books about military uniforms might seem lame by today's ill-defined standards, but that's what passed for amusement fifteen or so years ago. Anyway, the point I'm trying to make is that, while I was flipping, I couldn't help but notice that all the books on German uniforms of the Third Reich looked worn out, while all the other books seemed like they were in pristine condition. And you know what they say? Book creases doesn't lie. People love Nazi fashion, and Salon Kitty captures that love in way that didn't make me feel uncomfortable. I only wish all war movies were like this, because I despise war movies that focus on war. War is stupid. Fashion, on the other hand, is sexy, and sexy always trumps stupid.


nsfw video uploaded by CriterionDungeon
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Monday, July 26, 2010

Faceless (Jess Franco, 1987)

The extreme lengths one will go through in order to attain the perfect complexion is examined in the ghastly Faceless (a.k.a. Les prédateurs de la nuit), a plastic surgery gone awry chiller from trash peddler extraordinaire Jess Franco (Bloody Moon, Eugénie de Sade, and hundreds of other works of sleazy goodness). Well, actually, I wouldn't go as so far to say that there is any sort of "examining" going on this film–after all, it's a Franco flick (tawdry thrills and lingering leg moments are the main order of business). But as far as watching backroom chainsaw dismemberment, unwanted face peeling, gigolos getting scissored in the neck, drill heads being changed prior to a head being drilled, and, my personal favourite, syringes wielded by sophisticated women of European extraction go, I'd say the film is resounding success. Oh, sure, Telly Savalas (NFL Players Association Awards Dinner) literally phones in his performance and the amount of flame coming off the guy playing the Dorothy-friendly fashion photographer will cause your inexpensive gaydar to explode into a million fabulous pieces. But what exactly is wrong with using a telephone and being aggressively flamboyant? I can't think of anything.

After a night of high end shopping, Dr. Flamand (Helmet Berger), his wife Ingrid (Christiane Jean) and his sister Nathalie (Brigitte Lahaie) are confronted in a Paris parking garage by a dissatisfied patient. Unhappy with the results of her plastic surgery, the scarred woman throws a glass of acid in Ingrid's face. Mildly disfigured ("mildly" because I thought she still looked hot), Ingrid retreats from the world. Determined to bring his wife back to a state of acceptable attractiveness, Dr. Flamand and Nathalie begin to work on finding her a new face.

This search sees them abducting a fashion model named Barbara (Caroline Munro), a prostitute (Amélie Chevalier), and an actress (Florence Guérin). The model's disappearance (she was lured with sweet cocaine) causes her New York-based father (Telly Savalas) to hire a private detective (Christopher Mitchum) to do what the French police can't seem to do, and that is, find out what happened to Barbara.

Luckily for her, Dr. Flamand and Nathalie's deranged man-servant (Gérard Zalcberg) causes Barbara some facial distress during an off-the-cuff sexual assault.

As punishment for this act, the man-servant is forced to rub his face over the fishnet stocking-covered legs of Ingrid. Um, I don't really see how this is a punishment exactly. I mean, I must have missed something, because this looked like, from my cockeyed point-of-view, to be the best punishment ever.

Anyway, unsure of his face transplanting skills, Dr. Flamand employs the services of a former SS doctor (Anton Diffring) who did experiments at Dachau. The nonchalant manner in which Dr. Flamand and Nathalie go about finding the Nazi physician was kind of jarring. Killing women for their faces is one thing, but hiring a Nazi?

A nosy, wheelchair-bound patient (Stéphane Audran), who is recovering in the non-antiseptic dungeon wing of Dr. Flamand's clinic, starts to get suspicious of all the sinister activity going on downstairs, but she is quickly taken care of.

A virtual lingerie bonanza–in that it worships everything below the neck–the human face is effectively rendered redundant in this film. Whether it was Jess Franco's intention or not, but what I took away from the film is that the face, while important in some social situations, isn't necessary. The body, particularly when draped in pleasing fabrics, supplants the face when it comes to winning over the fickle crotches of others.

Every scene that features a woman enticing her intended victim seems to centre around the act of lifting up a piece of fabric to reveal the fleshy, unadorned area that separates the structural inner workings of their intricate lingerie. This combination of nylon and skin is so harmonious, that the person generating the images of this frothy display with his or her cerebral cortex will discover that their genitals have since become inflamed with a feverish form of desire.

However, it should be said, that in the case of Caroline Munro, she doesn't even seem to need lingerie.* Merely utilizing the tantalizing shape of her full-flavoured thighs, Caroline manages to manipulate a degenerate without the aid of flouncy undergarments.

Alluring, chic, and moderately evil all at once, Brigitte Lahaie is elegance personified as Nathalie, Dr. Flamand's unscrupulous assistant/kleptomaniac sister. Whether plunging syringes into the eyes of paranoid patients or driving scissors into the throats of untactful male prostitutes, Brigitte oozes sophistication and a steely brand of grace. I liked how she called the tactless boy-toy an "asshole" right before ventilating his neck area; the way it clashed with her overall European elan made my ovaries sing.

With her dark, piercing eyes–which looked extra nefarious when paired with red leather–Miss Lahaie cast an eerie spell over the proceedings. No fooling, nary a scene goes by without a shot of Brigitte staring intently at something.

When I first saw Florence Guérin dominating the dancefloor at the local discotheque, my eyes couldn't help but notice that her white fingerless gloves had less finger material than your average pair of fingerless gloves. After I grew bored with admiring her swanky handwear, it was Florence's black high-waisted leather mini-skirt's turn to dazzle my senses.

In terms of leather skirts seen throughout the history of pop culture, I'd definitely put Florence's up there with the one Papillon Soo Soo wears as a Da Nang prostitute in Full Metal Jacket and the many that Italian singer Sabrina Salerno struggled to keep on during the late 1980s. What I liked about it was that it gave her vagina and the wind swept confines of her delicious anus the coverage they so desperately need to go about their daily business, or in this case, nightly business, with a modicum of confidence. At the same time, the skirt managed to accentuate the length of her spectacular gams.

While Papillon's leather skirt seemed like it was glued on, and Sabrina's appeared to have a mind of its own, Florence's was lifted up on purpose. You see, Florence Guérin (who plays herself in this film) wants to impress Dr. Flamand and Nathalie (especially the latter, who clearly has dibs on her labia), and she does so by lounging seductively on their sofa. Pulling up her black high-waisted leather mini-skirt with a determined hiking motion, she lays out the exquisite fullness of her Gallic frame for all to see. Exposing the softness of her womanly body like it were a freshly cooked meal, Florence awaits the return of her horny hosts with a breathy mix of trepidation and insincere coquettishness.

A kinda remake of the classic Eyes Without a Face, this knock off/undertaking is similar in that it takes place in France and is about a doctor who desperately wants to procure a new face for a female loved one. Yet, being a Jess Franco film, the deep and thoughtful aspects of the Georges Franju version have been jettisoned and have found themselves replaced with discotheques, fur coats, garter belts, make out sessions with severed heads, cocaine, pimps named Rashid, and, of course, black high-waisted leather mini-skirts. Not a bad trade, if you ask me.

* Do leg restraints count as lingerie? The UCLA, the undergarment council for lingerie affairs, stated in its 1894 charter that: "Any fabric that is used to emphasize the natural beauty of the human body, whether intentional or not, shall fall comfortably under the lingerie umbrella." And, hey, I'm not one to argue with the UCLA, so I guess the answer to my question is a resounding yes. They do count. Yay!


Special thanks to the swanky empresses over at the Love Train for the Tenebrous Empire for causing my frazzled mind to become acutely aware of this botched face lift, high-waisted leather skirt-laden piece of trashy cinema.
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