Truck Stop Women is a 1974 film, directed by Mark L. Lester and partly financed by Phil Gramm.[2]
Truck Stop Women | |
---|---|
Directed by | Mark L. Lester |
Written by | Mark L. Lester Paul Deason |
Story by | Paul Deason |
Produced by | Mark Lester executive Peter Traynor |
Starring | Claudia Jennings Lieux Dressler Dennis Fimple Gene Drew Paul Carr Jennifer Burton |
Production company | LT Films |
Distributed by | American International Pictures |
Release date |
|
Running time | 82 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Budget | $300,000[1] |
Box office | $4 million (est.)[1] |
Plot
editA mother (Lieux Dressler) runs a brothel for truckers on the New Mexico highways and her stable includes her daughter (Claudia Jennings). The daughter is sick of her mother controlling things and begins working with some men from the "Eastern Mafia" who are attempting to take over their operation.[3]
Cast
edit- Claudia Jennings as Rose
- Lieux Dressler as Anna
- Dennis Fimple as Curly
- Gene Drew as Mac
- Paul Carr as Seago
- Jennifer Burton as Tina
- Johnny Martino as Smith
Production
editThe film was partly financed by Peter Traynor a real estate millionaire.[4]
Mark Lester said, "My movies were always harking back to exploitation movies of the '40s and '50s" and that he was particularly inspirde by White Heat (1949). "When she runs around the cattle truck shooting her gun off in that scene, I was thinking of the scene where James Cagney is shooting off the gun in the trunk of the car."[5]
Mark Lester later recalled "“When I finished the movie, there wasn’t enough sex in it according to the distributors. They said, ‘Well, nothing ever happens—the truck stop women are never naked and they never do anything sexy.’ So I shot a couple of extra days. That’s when I did the sex scene with Claudia.”[6]
Reception
editThe Los Angeles Times called it "a lurid, raucous, rootin'-tootin' exploitationer" in which "Lester demonstrates a terrific sense of style and pace and a remarkable control."[7]
In September 1974 Lester said the film had earned $2 million and was on track to make $4 million.[1]
References
edit- ^ a b c Browne, Christine (19 September 1974). "Amazon truckers haul a load of cash away from the box office". Detroit Free Press. p. 11D.
- ^ Phil Gramm is Gone, But His Porn Lives on | PEEK | AlterNet Archived June 4, 2011, at the Wayback Machine
- ^ Truck Stop Women (1974)
- ^ "Bill Holden says no to ultimate thrill". Chicago Tribune. 17 January 1974. p. 44.
- ^ Cribbs, John (2011). "The Films of Mark L Lester". The Pink Smoke.
- ^ Bass, Ari (July 2000). "Claudia Jennings Lost Highway". Femme Fetale. p. 48.
- ^ Thomas, Kevin (8 November 1974). "Dishing it out to truckers". The Los Angeles Times. p. 24.
External links
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