Following the closing of the Robinson Mine, the citizens of Ely, Nevada, formed The Bristlecone Film Committee in 1983. The committee advertised their town as an ideal filming location, which caught the attention of producer/director Eric Louzil. Louzil contacted the committee in 1984 to use Ely as the filming location for a women-in-prison movie, Georgia County Lock-up. Filming started in 1985 on a $1.5 million budget, with many locals serving as cast and crew. About 30% of the film was shot in Nevada, while the rest of the filming took place in California. In 1986, Louzil met with Lloyd Kaufman, who agreed to add $125,000 for sound, additional filming, and converting to 35mm. In exchange, Troma would get distribution rights to the film, which included theatrical and home video. After premiering at Cannes in 1987 as Lust For Freedom, the film hit theaters the following year.

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Rating

Synopsis

After an undercover drug bust went wrong, police detective Gillian Kaites (Melanie Coll) mourns the death of her partner/fiance. She goes on a road trip to try and forget what happened and is taken to the Georgia County police. Kaites meets with Sheriff Coale (William J. Kulzer), who spikes her drink and frames her for possessing illegal substances. She wakes up in prison with several other women who’ve been captured and thrown in jail for bogus reasons. Coale and his partner, Ms. Pusker (Judi Trevor), subject the prisoners to torture and abuse. In addition, Warden Maxwell (Howard Knight) sells the girls off to the highest bidder and makes snuff porn. Having witnessed all the abuse she and the other prisoners have suffered, Kaites decides to start a jailbreak. She’ll make sure her fellow prisoners have the same lust for freedom that she does.

 

Review

Lust For Freedom is as bare bones as you can get with a women-in-prison movie, and that’s not bad. This movie is exactly what you want if you’re looking for gratuitous nudity, massive explosions, and gun violence. Unfortunately, that’s about all this movie offers because the rest is pretty bland and not as bombastic as it promises. To his credit, it feels like Louzil wanted to make a legitimate exploitation film rather than an intentionally campy flick. Like Fortress of Amerikkka, which came out two years later, this movie plays it reasonably straight. All the actors play their parts like they’re in a legitimate drama, with no one going too over the top. This is Melanie Coll’s only acting credit to date, and it’s easy to see why since she’s not very memorable. It’s not that she’s terrible, but she doesn’t stand out from everyone else.

William J. Kulzer, who gave a stand-out villainous performance in Louzil’s later film, is surprisingly subdued here. What’s more surprising is that he goes from being a bad guy to becoming one of the good guys later. Opposite Kulzer is Judi Trevor, who seems to be trying to stand apart from everyone else with her performance. She tries to be intimidating and over-the-top, but it doesn’t quite work when the rest of the movie is uninteresting. There’s plenty of T&A, but it feels less like a trashy exploitation flick and more like soft-core porn. The soundtrack keeps this movie mildly entertaining, especially the title track and “Rock You To Hell” by Grim Reaper. Combined with all the nudity and explosions, the music enhances this film’s cheesy B-movie quality. Overall, Lust For Freedom has some entertaining elements, but it’s mostly a forgettable watch.

 

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