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Women in prison film

The women in prison film (or WiP film) is a subgenre of exploitation film that began in the early 20th century and continues to the present day.[1]

Their stories feature imprisoned women who are subjected to sexual and physical abuse, typically by sadistic male or female prison wardens, guards and other inmates. The genre also features many films in which imprisoned women engage in lesbian sex.

As they are traditionally constructed, WiP films are works of fiction intended as pornography. The films of this genre include a mixture of erotic adventures of the women in prison.[2] The flexible format, and the loosening of film censorship laws in the 1960s, allowed filmmakers to depict more extreme fetishes, such as voyeurism (strip searches, group shower scenes, catfights), sexual fantasies (lesbianism, rape, sexual slavery), fetishism (bondage, whipping, degradation), and sadism (beatings, torture, cruelty).

Prior to these films, another expression of pornographic women in prison was found in "true adventure" men's magazines such as Argosy in the 1950s and 1960s, although it is possible that Denis Diderot's novel The Nun anticipated the genre. Nazis tormenting damsels in distress were particularly common in these magazines.

Recurring plot elements edit

Most women-in-prison films employ the same stock characters and formulaic situations. Characters that are fellow inmates may include a sarcastic prostitute, a manipulative snitch, or an aggressive lesbian. The female criminals are usually hypersexualized and fetishize homosexual relationships.[3] The authority figure of the prison is usually a cruel woman who herself is a variation of the traditional prison lesbian.[4] Common scenes in women in prison films may include:

  • An innocent girl (or group) being sent to a penitentiary or reform school run by a male or lesbian warden (who may also run an inmate prostitution ring, as in Chained Heat)
  • A "welcoming" ritual which may include group strip searches, giving up any personal possessions, or showering (all while being watched by sexually deprived female inmates)[4]
  • Lesbian sex scenes between prisoners and the guards, or the female prisoners being raped (or forced into prostitution) by male guards
  • Female prisoners being sentenced to hard labor (such as scrubbing floors, chopping coconuts, or digging dirt holes, sometimes while nude)
  • Having a restrictive/uncomfortable dress code, such as being forced to go barefoot, and/or wearing skimpy, revealing prison uniforms.
  • Fights between the prisoners (sometimes in the shower or in mud, many times while naked)
  • Beatings by guards
  • Suicide or death of a minor character[4]
  • Female prisoners being sprayed by a firehose for punishment[4]

The narrative peaks with some kind of rebellion, which may include a fight, attempted break out, or natural disaster such as a prison fire or earthquake.[4] The story then follows with an uprising or escape sequence in which the villains are killed and the prisoner is freed. Occasionally a new inmate is an undercover reporter investigating corruption as in Bare Behind Bars or a government agent sent to rescue a political prisoner (Caged Heat 2: Stripped of Freedom, Love Camp 7). Most commonly, the prisoner is reunited with a man (a lover, father, or priest) who guides her to goodness so she can reestablish her life with familial and heterosexual relationships.[4]

History of the genre edit

In the silent era, only a few films featured women as leading characters in crime dramas. A silent film star who perfected such roles was Priscilla Dean, most notably in The Wicked Darling (1919) and Outside the Law (1920). But it was not until the 1930s that Hollywood began making movies partially set in women's prisons, such as Up the River (1930), with Claire Luce, Ladies They Talk About (1933), with Barbara Stanwyck, Hold Your Man (1933), with Jean Harlow, and Girls on Probation (1938), with Jane Bryan, but generally, only a small part of the action took place inside the institution. Women-in-prison films developed in the 1930s as melodramas in which young heroines were shown the way to a righteous life by way of the prison. Under the influence of pulp magazines and paperbacks, they became popular B movies during this period. It was not until the 1950s, beginning with the release of Caged (1950), starring Eleanor Parker and Agnes Moorehead, So Young, So Bad (also 1950), with Anne Francis and Rita Moreno, Women's Prison (1955) with Ida Lupino and Cleo Moore and, in Great Britain, The Weak and the Wicked (1954), with Glynis Johns and Diana Dors, that an entire film was set inside a women's correctional facility.

Several films were made about women prisoners interned by the Germans and Japanese during the Second World War such as Two Thousand Women and Three Came Home.

The film that kicked off the genre in a new direction was Jesús Franco's 99 Women, which was a big box office success in the U.S. in 1969. That year Love Camp 7 was also among the first pure exploitation films that influenced the women in prison and Nazi exploitation genres.

From 1979 to 1986, Australian Television's hit women's incarceration drama, Prisoner: Cell Block H, ran to 692 episodes.

In 1999, the popular TV series Bad Girls was released on Britain's television network, ITV. Bad Girls took a turn from the usual prison drama seen before to show a different perspective of women's lives and sexuality in prison. Sociologist Didi Herman states, "Unlike other mainstream television products that may have lesbian or gay characters within a prevailing context of heteronormativity, [Bad Girls] represents lesbian sexuality as normal, desirable, and possible."[5]

A number of the WiP films remain banned by the BBFC in the United Kingdom. Among them are Love Camp 7 (rejected in 2022) and Women in Cellblock 9 (rejected in 2004), on the grounds that they contain substantial scenes of sexual violence and in the case of the latter an actress who at 16 was under age at the time of production, rendering it child pornography under U.K. law.[6]

American films edit

Examples of traditional WiP films set in the U.S. include: The Concrete Jungle (1982), and Chained Heat (1983) with Linda Blair, Tamara Dobson and Sybil Danning, Cell Block Sisters (1995), Caged Hearts (1995), Bad Girls Dormitory (1985), Under Lock & Key, Caged Fear (1991), Caged (1950), Freeway (1996) with Reese Witherspoon and Brittany Murphy, and Stranger Inside (2001).

American tourists are incarcerated overseas in Chained Heat 2 (1993) with Brigitte Nielsen and Red Heat (1985) with Linda Blair. Both films are about innocent women who are thrown into foreign prisons and forced to face sadistic guards and brutal rape. Mainstream, non-exploitation prison films dealing with this theme include Bangkok Hilton (1989) starring Nicole Kidman and Brokedown Palace (1999) with Claire Danes, both which are set in Thailand and are focused on women who are imprisoned for smuggling drugs. Also Prison Heat (1993 film), set in Turkey, is about four innocent American women who are mistakenly thrown in prison for cocaine possession.

Jonathan Demme's Caged Heat (1974) is one of the better known WiP films and has a cult following due to its tongue-in-cheek approach and casting of horror icon Barbara Steele as the warden. Demme also co-wrote The Hot Box in 1972, which is about female prisoners who break free and start a rebellion against their captors.

In recent years, films that parody or pay homage to the classic WiP films of the '70s have emerged such as Cody Jarrett's Sugar Boxx (2009) and Steve Balderson's Stuck! (2010). Both of these films mimic classic WiP films by including typical WiP film characters, predictable scenes, and similar plots overall.

Italian films edit

Italian exploitation directors have produced scores of WiP films with far more graphic sex and violence than those produced in the U.S.

Bruno Mattei directed Women's Prison Massacre (1985), Caged Women (1982), and Jail — A Women's Hell (2006). Other films include Women in Fury (1985) and Caged Women in Purgatory (1991).

The Nazi exploitation subgenre centers on the same theme of captive women suffering abuses in war-time prison camps. Many of these films were developed in the late 1970s and the early 1980s as the industry continued to grow. Films such as SS Experiment Love Camp, SS Camp 5: Women's Hell, Hell Behind the Bars and Hell Penitentiary directed by Sergio Garrone in 1983, Gestapo's Last Orgy (1977) directed by Cesare Canevari, Helga, She Wolf of Spilberg (1978) and Fraulein Devil (1977) directed by Patrice Rhomm, SS Hell Camp (1977) directed by Luigi Batzella, Women in Cell Block 7 (1973) directed by Rino Di Silvestro and Nazi Love Camp 27 (1977) directed by Mario Caiano were partly inspired by the U.S./Canadian Ilsa series.

Asian films edit

The abuse of Chinese women in Japanese detention or prisoner-of-war camps during World War II is depicted in a series of Hong Kong films. Prime examples include Bamboo House of Dolls (1973) with Birte Tove, and Great Escape from a Women's Prison. Comfort Women (1992) is based on real events. Chinese prostitutes are abducted by Japanese soldiers and used for brutal scientific experiments at the notorious Unit 731 medical camp.

A Chinese Torture Chamber Story (1994) and its sequel are based on historical records of China's Qing dynasty. The topic of sex "is usually considered taboo in traditional Chinese society", which makes the film industry scandalous and frowned upon by many.

One of the very early examples of the genre in Japan began with Death row Woman, a noir drama made by the master of J-horror Nobuo Nakagawa in 1960, although the plot doesn't focus entirely inside of the prison. After, the women prison films are often made into a series based on popular characters from manga comics such as Prisoner Maria and the Joshu Sasori series, most known by the Meiko Kaji films. Many Japanese films include themes of vengeance and retribution with a heroine who take revenge against the drug or prostitution syndicates responsible for her incarceration. In the film Female Convict 701: Scorpion, the audience "can see a story of Japanese women in captivity, with lots of very life-like scenes" because Japanese directors desire to produce "natural looking stories" to enhance the reality of the situation. Many Japanese films contain these "natural looking stories" because they were based on life events, such as the internment camps.

Sub-genres edit

The "jungle prison" subgenre has films set in fictional Banana republic nations run by corrupt dictators in either South America or Southeast Asia. The majority of these were filmed in the Philippines where production costs are low. Here, a group of nubile prisoners are herded together in a stockade prison camp and used as slave labor, doing tasks such as cutting sugar cane or digging in a quarry. These films usually involve a revolution subplot with political prisoners freed by other inmates in a climactic raid where the villains are killed. Actress Pam Grier starred in several Filipino jungle films such as Roger Corman's The Big Doll House and its sequel The Big Bird Cage, plus Women in Cages, and Black Mama White Mama (story co-written by Jonathan Demme).

Sweet Sugar (1972) starred Phyllis Davis, Caged Heat 2: Stripped of Freedom (1994) featured Jewel Shepard as an undercover agent. The especially brutal Escape from Hell, a.k.a. Escape (1979) and its sequel Hotel Paradise came from Italy. Jesus Franco's Sadomania features scenes such as gladiator fights to the death and prisoners hunted like animals in an alligator-infested swamp.

Related genres edit

Nunsploitation edit

The Nunsploitation (nun exploitation) subgenre emerged at the same time as the WiP film and is composed of the same basic elements. The stories are set in isolated convents that resemble prisons where sexually repressed nuns are driven to rampant lesbianism and perversity.

The Mother Superior is usually a cruel and corrupt warden-like martinet. The nuns are treated like convicts, with rule-breakers subjected to whippings or Inquisition-style tortures. The added element of religious guilt entails scenes of masochism and self-flagellation.

Mixed-genre prison films edit

The WiP film has also expanded into other areas and film genres such as horror and science fiction.

A notable European horror-hybrid is the 1969 Spanish film, The House That Screamed. A psycho-killer lurks in a house for wayward girls run by a harsh disciplinarian (Lilli Palmer). This groundbreaking film has influenced many others, particularly the Dario Argento thriller Suspiria.

Human Experiments (1979), and Hellhole (1985) are two examples of a spate of horror films where prisoners are experimented on by mad scientists.

Werewolf in a Women's Prison (2006) draws from the monster-movie genre.

Caged Heat 3000 (1995) stars Lisa Boyle (a.k.a. Cassandra Leigh) as an inmate on an asteroid prison. Includes futuristic touches such as electric bra torment and cattle prod-like sticks.

Star Slammer, a.k.a. Prison Ship (1986) is one of several low-budget space sagas set in the future.[7]

Chained Heat 3: Hell Mountain (1998) and Chained Rage: Slave to Love (2002) are both set in a barbaric post-nuclear world where slaves are forced to toil in the mines.

Terminal Island (1973) with Phyllis Davis, Tom Selleck, and Marta Kristen and Caged in Paradise (1989) starring Irene Cara are both set on isolated island penal colonies with no prisons or guards. Inmates are simply stranded there and must fend for themselves. The 1985 Japanese film Banished Behind Bars has a similar theme.

Janet Perlman's satirical graphic novel Penguins Behind Bars is a parody of the women in prison genre. It was later adapted by Perlman as an animated short which aired in the U.S. on Cartoon Network.[8][9]

Prison film producers edit

In recent years, North American Pictures, the Canadian makers of Chained Heat 2 set up a separate production company in the Czech Republic called Bound Heat Films for creating R-rated, erotic WiP, Nazisploitation, and female slavery films. Many of these star Rena Riffel (from Showgirls). Titles include: School of Surrender, Dark Confessions, Stories from Slave Life, No Escape, Caligula's Spawn, Slave Huntress, and Bound Cargo.[10] While not technically considered pornography the nudity in many of the scenes in these films draws on fetishes as a dramatic element.

Bars and Stripes is a video producer that maintains a website entirely devoted to its line of prison-based BDSM fetish films. A stable of recurring "inmates" are listed with mug shots and information. Most of the films are part of a continuing story. Other companies that exclusively produce prison fetish films include Chain Gang Girls, CagedTushy.com, and SpankCamp.com.

Cheryl Dunye is an independent film producer who produced the prison drama Stranger Inside (2001) about a young African American women who purposely misbehaves in juvenile detention to get transferred to the women's prison in an effort to reunite with her imprisoned mother.[11]

See also edit

References edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Bratten, L. Clare (2018). Demystifying the big house: exploring prison experience and media representations. Carbondale: Southern Illinois University Press. p. 25. ISBN 9780809336579.
  2. ^ "History of WIP films | Women in Prison Films". Women in Prison Films. 2011-04-15. Retrieved 2016-12-05.
  3. ^ Pardue, Angela; Arrigo, Bruce; Murphy, Daniel (2011). "Sex and Sexuality in Women's Prisons: A Preliminary Typological Investigation" (PDF). The Prison Journal. 91 (3): 279–304. doi:10.1177/0032885511409869. S2CID 54883491.
  4. ^ a b c d e f Ciasullo, Ann (2008). "Containing "Deviant" Desire: Lesbianism, Heterosexuality, and the Women-in-Prison Narrative". The Journal of Popular Culture. 41 (2): 195–223. doi:10.1111/j.1540-5931.2008.00499.x.
  5. ^ Herman, Didi (2003). ""Bad Girls Changed My Life": Homonormativity in a Women's Prison Drama". Critical Studies in Media Communication. 20 (2): 141–159. doi:10.1080/07393180302779. S2CID 144544008.
  6. ^ . BBFC. Archived from the original on 7 July 2014.
  7. ^ Erickson, Hal (2012). . Movies & TV Dept. The New York Times. Archived from the original on 2012-02-18. Retrieved 2009-06-08.
  8. ^ Lenburg, Jeff (1 June 2006). Who's Who in Animated Cartoons: An International Guide to Film and Television's Award-Winning and Legendary Animators. Applause Books. pp. 283–284. ISBN 978-1-55783-671-7.
  9. ^ Deneroff, Harvey (17 May 2004). . Animation World Network. Archived from the original on 18 September 2011. Retrieved 25 January 2011.
  10. ^ "Lesbian Slaves and Mistress Movies - Boundheat.com". www.boundheat.com.
  11. ^ Savage, Ann M (2008). Women film directors and producers. Butler University Libraries. p. 390.

Bibliography edit

  • Bouclin, Suzanne (2007). Caging women: punishment, judgment, reform, and resistance in women in prison films (LL.M. thesis). University of Manitoba. OCLC 855390949.
  • Bouclin, Suzanne (2009). "Women in prison movies as feminist jurisprudence". Canadian Journal of Women and the Law. 21 (1): 19–34. doi:10.3138/cjwl.21.1.19. S2CID 145778327. SSRN 1866026.
  • Clowers, Marsha (2001). "Dykes, gangs, and danger: debunking popular myths about maximum-security life". Journal of Criminal Justice and Popular Culture. 9 (1): 22–30. Pdf. 2009-02-19 at the Wayback Machine
  • Mayne, Judith (2000), "Caged and framed: the women-in-prison film", in Mayne, Judith (ed.), Framed: lesbians, feminists, and media culture, Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, pp. 115–147, ISBN 978-0-8166-3457-6.
  • Morey, Anne (Summer 1995). ""The judge called me an accessory": women's prison films, 1950-1962". Journal of Popular Film & Television. 23 (2): 80–87. doi:10.1080/01956051.1995.9943692.
  • Rapaport, Lynn (Fall 2003). "Holocaust pornography: profaning the sacred in Ilsa, She-Wolf of the SS". Shofar: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Jewish Studies. 22 (1): 53–79. doi:10.1353/sho.2003.0100. S2CID 143508580.
  • Waller, Gregory A. (Fall 1983). "Auto-erotica: some notes on comic softcore films for the drive-in circuit". Journal of Popular Culture. 17 (2): 135–141. doi:10.1111/j.0022-3840.1983.1702_135.x.
  • Danuta Walters, Suzanna (2001), "Caged heat: the (r)evolution of women-in-prison films", in McCaughey, Martha; King, Neal (eds.), Reel knockouts violent women in the movies, Austin, Texas: University of Texas Press, pp. 106–123, ISBN 978-0-292-75251-1.
  • Williams, Melanie (March 2002). "Women in prison and women in dressing gowns: rediscovering the 1950s films of J. Lee Thompson". Journal of Gender Studies. 11 (1): 5–15. doi:10.1080/09589230120115121. S2CID 144968317.
  • Savage, Ann M (2008). "Women film directors and producers". Butler University Libraries. 390. Pdf.

Further reading edit

  • Hughes, Sarah. "Women's TV prison dramas: 10 vital ingredients." The Guardian. Wednesday July 10, 2013.

External links edit

  • WIP Cinema Guide
  • Women in Prison section of Prison Flicks
  • Theprisonfilmproject.com: Overview of developments in the U.S. and the U.K. 1922 - 2003
  • Lesbians in Women-in-Prison Movies
  • Stock characters in women in prison films
  • Blog about WIP films
  • Prison Film Bibliography (via UC Berkeley)

women, prison, film, women, prison, redirects, here, series, women, prison, series, incarceration, women, incarceration, women, women, prison, film, film, subgenre, exploitation, film, that, began, early, 20th, century, continues, present, their, stories, feat. Women in Prison redirects here For the TV series see Women in Prison TV series For the incarceration of women see incarceration of women The women in prison film or WiP film is a subgenre of exploitation film that began in the early 20th century and continues to the present day 1 Their stories feature imprisoned women who are subjected to sexual and physical abuse typically by sadistic male or female prison wardens guards and other inmates The genre also features many films in which imprisoned women engage in lesbian sex As they are traditionally constructed WiP films are works of fiction intended as pornography The films of this genre include a mixture of erotic adventures of the women in prison 2 The flexible format and the loosening of film censorship laws in the 1960s allowed filmmakers to depict more extreme fetishes such as voyeurism strip searches group shower scenes catfights sexual fantasies lesbianism rape sexual slavery fetishism bondage whipping degradation and sadism beatings torture cruelty Prior to these films another expression of pornographic women in prison was found in true adventure men s magazines such as Argosy in the 1950s and 1960s although it is possible that Denis Diderot s novel The Nun anticipated the genre Nazis tormenting damsels in distress were particularly common in these magazines Contents 1 Recurring plot elements 2 History of the genre 2 1 American films 2 2 Italian films 2 3 Asian films 2 4 Sub genres 3 Related genres 3 1 Nunsploitation 3 2 Mixed genre prison films 4 Prison film producers 5 See also 6 References 6 1 Notes 6 2 Bibliography 7 Further reading 8 External linksRecurring plot elements editMost women in prison films employ the same stock characters and formulaic situations Characters that are fellow inmates may include a sarcastic prostitute a manipulative snitch or an aggressive lesbian The female criminals are usually hypersexualized and fetishize homosexual relationships 3 The authority figure of the prison is usually a cruel woman who herself is a variation of the traditional prison lesbian 4 Common scenes in women in prison films may include An innocent girl or group being sent to a penitentiary or reform school run by a male or lesbian warden who may also run an inmate prostitution ring as in Chained Heat A welcoming ritual which may include group strip searches giving up any personal possessions or showering all while being watched by sexually deprived female inmates 4 Lesbian sex scenes between prisoners and the guards or the female prisoners being raped or forced into prostitution by male guards Female prisoners being sentenced to hard labor such as scrubbing floors chopping coconuts or digging dirt holes sometimes while nude Having a restrictive uncomfortable dress code such as being forced to go barefoot and or wearing skimpy revealing prison uniforms Fights between the prisoners sometimes in the shower or in mud many times while naked Beatings by guards Suicide or death of a minor character 4 Female prisoners being sprayed by a firehose for punishment 4 The narrative peaks with some kind of rebellion which may include a fight attempted break out or natural disaster such as a prison fire or earthquake 4 The story then follows with an uprising or escape sequence in which the villains are killed and the prisoner is freed Occasionally a new inmate is an undercover reporter investigating corruption as in Bare Behind Bars or a government agent sent to rescue a political prisoner Caged Heat 2 Stripped of Freedom Love Camp 7 Most commonly the prisoner is reunited with a man a lover father or priest who guides her to goodness so she can reestablish her life with familial and heterosexual relationships 4 History of the genre editIn the silent era only a few films featured women as leading characters in crime dramas A silent film star who perfected such roles was Priscilla Dean most notably in The Wicked Darling 1919 and Outside the Law 1920 But it was not until the 1930s that Hollywood began making movies partially set in women s prisons such as Up the River 1930 with Claire Luce Ladies They Talk About 1933 with Barbara Stanwyck Hold Your Man 1933 with Jean Harlow and Girls on Probation 1938 with Jane Bryan but generally only a small part of the action took place inside the institution Women in prison films developed in the 1930s as melodramas in which young heroines were shown the way to a righteous life by way of the prison Under the influence of pulp magazines and paperbacks they became popular B movies during this period It was not until the 1950s beginning with the release of Caged 1950 starring Eleanor Parker and Agnes Moorehead So Young So Bad also 1950 with Anne Francis and Rita Moreno Women s Prison 1955 with Ida Lupino and Cleo Moore and in Great Britain The Weak and the Wicked 1954 with Glynis Johns and Diana Dors that an entire film was set inside a women s correctional facility Several films were made about women prisoners interned by the Germans and Japanese during the Second World War such as Two Thousand Women and Three Came Home The film that kicked off the genre in a new direction was Jesus Franco s 99 Women which was a big box office success in the U S in 1969 That year Love Camp 7 was also among the first pure exploitation films that influenced the women in prison and Nazi exploitation genres From 1979 to 1986 Australian Television s hit women s incarceration drama Prisoner Cell Block H ran to 692 episodes In 1999 the popular TV series Bad Girls was released on Britain s television network ITV Bad Girls took a turn from the usual prison drama seen before to show a different perspective of women s lives and sexuality in prison Sociologist Didi Herman states Unlike other mainstream television products that may have lesbian or gay characters within a prevailing context of heteronormativity Bad Girls represents lesbian sexuality as normal desirable and possible 5 A number of the WiP films remain banned by the BBFC in the United Kingdom Among them are Love Camp 7 rejected in 2022 and Women in Cellblock 9 rejected in 2004 on the grounds that they contain substantial scenes of sexual violence and in the case of the latter an actress who at 16 was under age at the time of production rendering it child pornography under U K law 6 American films edit Examples of traditional WiP films set in the U S include The Concrete Jungle 1982 and Chained Heat 1983 with Linda Blair Tamara Dobson and Sybil Danning Cell Block Sisters 1995 Caged Hearts 1995 Bad Girls Dormitory 1985 Under Lock amp Key Caged Fear 1991 Caged 1950 Freeway 1996 with Reese Witherspoon and Brittany Murphy and Stranger Inside 2001 American tourists are incarcerated overseas in Chained Heat 2 1993 with Brigitte Nielsen and Red Heat 1985 with Linda Blair Both films are about innocent women who are thrown into foreign prisons and forced to face sadistic guards and brutal rape Mainstream non exploitation prison films dealing with this theme include Bangkok Hilton 1989 starring Nicole Kidman and Brokedown Palace 1999 with Claire Danes both which are set in Thailand and are focused on women who are imprisoned for smuggling drugs Also Prison Heat 1993 film set in Turkey is about four innocent American women who are mistakenly thrown in prison for cocaine possession Jonathan Demme s Caged Heat 1974 is one of the better known WiP films and has a cult following due to its tongue in cheek approach and casting of horror icon Barbara Steele as the warden Demme also co wrote The Hot Box in 1972 which is about female prisoners who break free and start a rebellion against their captors In recent years films that parody or pay homage to the classic WiP films of the 70s have emerged such as Cody Jarrett s Sugar Boxx 2009 and Steve Balderson s Stuck 2010 Both of these films mimic classic WiP films by including typical WiP film characters predictable scenes and similar plots overall Italian films edit Italian exploitation directors have produced scores of WiP films with far more graphic sex and violence than those produced in the U S Bruno Mattei directed Women s Prison Massacre 1985 Caged Women 1982 and Jail A Women s Hell 2006 Other films include Women in Fury 1985 and Caged Women in Purgatory 1991 The Nazi exploitation subgenre centers on the same theme of captive women suffering abuses in war time prison camps Many of these films were developed in the late 1970s and the early 1980s as the industry continued to grow Films such as SS Experiment Love Camp SS Camp 5 Women s Hell Hell Behind the Bars and Hell Penitentiary directed by Sergio Garrone in 1983 Gestapo s Last Orgy 1977 directed by Cesare Canevari Helga She Wolf of Spilberg 1978 and Fraulein Devil 1977 directed by Patrice Rhomm SS Hell Camp 1977 directed by Luigi Batzella Women in Cell Block 7 1973 directed by Rino Di Silvestro and Nazi Love Camp 27 1977 directed by Mario Caiano were partly inspired by the U S Canadian Ilsa series Asian films edit The abuse of Chinese women in Japanese detention or prisoner of war camps during World War II is depicted in a series of Hong Kong films Prime examples include Bamboo House of Dolls 1973 with Birte Tove and Great Escape from a Women s Prison Comfort Women 1992 is based on real events Chinese prostitutes are abducted by Japanese soldiers and used for brutal scientific experiments at the notorious Unit 731 medical camp A Chinese Torture Chamber Story 1994 and its sequel are based on historical records of China s Qing dynasty The topic of sex is usually considered taboo in traditional Chinese society which makes the film industry scandalous and frowned upon by many One of the very early examples of the genre in Japan began with Death row Woman a noir drama made by the master of J horror Nobuo Nakagawa in 1960 although the plot doesn t focus entirely inside of the prison After the women prison films are often made into a series based on popular characters from manga comics such as Prisoner Maria and the Joshu Sasori series most known by the Meiko Kaji films Many Japanese films include themes of vengeance and retribution with a heroine who take revenge against the drug or prostitution syndicates responsible for her incarceration In the film Female Convict 701 Scorpion the audience can see a story of Japanese women in captivity with lots of very life like scenes because Japanese directors desire to produce natural looking stories to enhance the reality of the situation Many Japanese films contain these natural looking stories because they were based on life events such as the internment camps Sub genres edit The jungle prison subgenre has films set in fictional Banana republic nations run by corrupt dictators in either South America or Southeast Asia The majority of these were filmed in the Philippines where production costs are low Here a group of nubile prisoners are herded together in a stockade prison camp and used as slave labor doing tasks such as cutting sugar cane or digging in a quarry These films usually involve a revolution subplot with political prisoners freed by other inmates in a climactic raid where the villains are killed Actress Pam Grier starred in several Filipino jungle films such as Roger Corman s The Big Doll House and its sequel The Big Bird Cage plus Women in Cages and Black Mama White Mama story co written by Jonathan Demme Sweet Sugar 1972 starred Phyllis Davis Caged Heat 2 Stripped of Freedom 1994 featured Jewel Shepard as an undercover agent The especially brutal Escape from Hell a k a Escape 1979 and its sequel Hotel Paradise came from Italy Jesus Franco s Sadomania features scenes such as gladiator fights to the death and prisoners hunted like animals in an alligator infested swamp Related genres editNunsploitation edit The Nunsploitation nun exploitation subgenre emerged at the same time as the WiP film and is composed of the same basic elements The stories are set in isolated convents that resemble prisons where sexually repressed nuns are driven to rampant lesbianism and perversity The Mother Superior is usually a cruel and corrupt warden like martinet The nuns are treated like convicts with rule breakers subjected to whippings or Inquisition style tortures The added element of religious guilt entails scenes of masochism and self flagellation Mixed genre prison films edit The WiP film has also expanded into other areas and film genres such as horror and science fiction A notable European horror hybrid is the 1969 Spanish film The House That Screamed A psycho killer lurks in a house for wayward girls run by a harsh disciplinarian Lilli Palmer This groundbreaking film has influenced many others particularly the Dario Argento thriller Suspiria Human Experiments 1979 and Hellhole 1985 are two examples of a spate of horror films where prisoners are experimented on by mad scientists Werewolf in a Women s Prison 2006 draws from the monster movie genre Caged Heat 3000 1995 stars Lisa Boyle a k a Cassandra Leigh as an inmate on an asteroid prison Includes futuristic touches such as electric bra torment and cattle prod like sticks Star Slammer a k a Prison Ship 1986 is one of several low budget space sagas set in the future 7 Chained Heat 3 Hell Mountain 1998 and Chained Rage Slave to Love 2002 are both set in a barbaric post nuclear world where slaves are forced to toil in the mines Terminal Island 1973 with Phyllis Davis Tom Selleck and Marta Kristen and Caged in Paradise 1989 starring Irene Cara are both set on isolated island penal colonies with no prisons or guards Inmates are simply stranded there and must fend for themselves The 1985 Japanese film Banished Behind Bars has a similar theme Janet Perlman s satirical graphic novel Penguins Behind Bars is a parody of the women in prison genre It was later adapted by Perlman as an animated short which aired in the U S on Cartoon Network 8 9 Prison film producers editIn recent years North American Pictures the Canadian makers of Chained Heat 2 set up a separate production company in the Czech Republic called Bound Heat Films for creating R rated erotic WiP Nazisploitation and female slavery films Many of these star Rena Riffel from Showgirls Titles include School of Surrender Dark Confessions Stories from Slave Life No Escape Caligula s Spawn Slave Huntress and Bound Cargo 10 While not technically considered pornography the nudity in many of the scenes in these films draws on fetishes as a dramatic element Bars and Stripes is a video producer that maintains a website entirely devoted to its line of prison based BDSM fetish films A stable of recurring inmates are listed with mug shots and information Most of the films are part of a continuing story Other companies that exclusively produce prison fetish films include Chain Gang Girls CagedTushy com and SpankCamp com Cheryl Dunye is an independent film producer who produced the prison drama Stranger Inside 2001 about a young African American women who purposely misbehaves in juvenile detention to get transferred to the women s prison in an effort to reunite with her imprisoned mother 11 See also edit nbsp Film portal List of LGBT related films directed by womenReferences editNotes edit Bratten L Clare 2018 Demystifying the big house exploring prison experience and media representations Carbondale Southern Illinois University Press p 25 ISBN 9780809336579 History of WIP films Women in Prison Films Women in Prison Films 2011 04 15 Retrieved 2016 12 05 Pardue Angela Arrigo Bruce Murphy Daniel 2011 Sex and Sexuality in Women s Prisons A Preliminary Typological Investigation PDF The Prison Journal 91 3 279 304 doi 10 1177 0032885511409869 S2CID 54883491 a b c d e f Ciasullo Ann 2008 Containing Deviant Desire Lesbianism Heterosexuality and the Women in Prison Narrative The Journal of Popular Culture 41 2 195 223 doi 10 1111 j 1540 5931 2008 00499 x Herman Didi 2003 Bad Girls Changed My Life Homonormativity in a Women s Prison Drama Critical Studies in Media Communication 20 2 141 159 doi 10 1080 07393180302779 S2CID 144544008 WOMEN IN CELLBLOCK 9 BBFC Archived from the original on 7 July 2014 Erickson Hal 2012 Prison Ship 1987 Movies amp TV Dept The New York Times Archived from the original on 2012 02 18 Retrieved 2009 06 08 Lenburg Jeff 1 June 2006 Who s Who in Animated Cartoons An International Guide to Film and Television s Award Winning and Legendary Animators Applause Books pp 283 284 ISBN 978 1 55783 671 7 Deneroff Harvey 17 May 2004 Cartoons on the Bay 2004 Report Animation World Network Archived from the original on 18 September 2011 Retrieved 25 January 2011 Lesbian Slaves and Mistress Movies Boundheat com www boundheat com Savage Ann M 2008 Women film directors and producers Butler University Libraries p 390 Bibliography edit Bouclin Suzanne 2007 Caging women punishment judgment reform and resistance in women in prison films LL M thesis University of Manitoba OCLC 855390949 Bouclin Suzanne 2009 Women in prison movies as feminist jurisprudence Canadian Journal of Women and the Law 21 1 19 34 doi 10 3138 cjwl 21 1 19 S2CID 145778327 SSRN 1866026 Clowers Marsha 2001 Dykes gangs and danger debunking popular myths about maximum security life Journal of Criminal Justice and Popular Culture 9 1 22 30 Pdf Archived 2009 02 19 at the Wayback Machine Mayne Judith 2000 Caged and framed the women in prison film in Mayne Judith ed Framed lesbians feminists and media culture Minneapolis University of Minnesota Press pp 115 147 ISBN 978 0 8166 3457 6 Morey Anne Summer 1995 The judge called me an accessory women s prison films 1950 1962 Journal of Popular Film amp Television 23 2 80 87 doi 10 1080 01956051 1995 9943692 Rapaport Lynn Fall 2003 Holocaust pornography profaning the sacred in Ilsa She Wolf of the SS Shofar An Interdisciplinary Journal of Jewish Studies 22 1 53 79 doi 10 1353 sho 2003 0100 S2CID 143508580 Waller Gregory A Fall 1983 Auto erotica some notes on comic softcore films for the drive in circuit Journal of Popular Culture 17 2 135 141 doi 10 1111 j 0022 3840 1983 1702 135 x Danuta Walters Suzanna 2001 Caged heat the r evolution of women in prison films in McCaughey Martha King Neal eds Reel knockouts violent women in the movies Austin Texas University of Texas Press pp 106 123 ISBN 978 0 292 75251 1 Williams Melanie March 2002 Women in prison and women in dressing gowns rediscovering the 1950s films of J Lee Thompson Journal of Gender Studies 11 1 5 15 doi 10 1080 09589230120115121 S2CID 144968317 Savage Ann M 2008 Women film directors and producers Butler University Libraries 390 Pdf Further reading editHughes Sarah Women s TV prison dramas 10 vital ingredients The Guardian Wednesday July 10 2013 External links editWIP Cinema Guide Women in Prison section of Prison Flicks Stuck official website Theprisonfilmproject com Overview of developments in the U S and the U K 1922 2003 Lesbians in Women in Prison Movies Stock characters in women in prison films Blog about WIP films Prison Film Bibliography via UC Berkeley Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Women in prison film amp oldid 1195421043, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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