Women in Cages (1971)

  • Year: 1971
  • Released: 15 Nov 1973
  • Country: Philippines, United States
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  • IMDb: https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0067995/
  • Rotten Tomatoes: https://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/women_in_cages
  • Metacritics:
  • Available in: 720p, 1080p,
  • Language: English
  • MPA Rating: R
  • Genre: Action, Crime, Drama
  • Runtime: 81 min
  • Writer: James H. Watkins, David Osterhout
  • Director: Gerardo de Leon
  • Cast: Judith Brown, Roberta Collins, Jennifer Gan
  • Keywords: prison, rape, sadism, exploitation, women’s prison, guillotine,
5.0/10

Women in Cages Storyline

Set up as a drug mule Carol’Jeff’Jeffries (Jennifer Gan) is arrested and thrown into a sadistic womens prison run by lesbian guard Alabama (Pam Grier) who takes pleasure in violating and torturing the women inmates. Knowing that Jeff can identify him and other drug leaders, kingpin Acosta (Bernard Bonnin) tries to have Jeff killed in prison rather than securing her release. Acosta coaxes Jeffs heroin-addict call mate Stokes (Roberta Collins) to kill the innocent inmate for more drugs, and also approaches Sandy (Judith Brown) with release if she helps. When Jeff engineers an escape Stokes, Sandy, andAlabamas girlfriend all join in, and in the final showdown pull together to get to freedom.

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Women in Cages Movie Reviews

Pam takes charge!

Jeff is sent to a woman prison, after being caught carrying heroine that belonged to her crime figure boyfriend Rudy. He asks her to keep her mouth shut and would try his best to get her out, but unknowingly to her he has other plans. When she arrives at the prison to do her time, she must face a tyrant of a head warden, Alabama who has a thing against American woman and a sadistic torture chamber of the dark ages called “the playpen” for certain troublemakers.

We all know the formula by now for cheap drive-in WIP features, I take it? Wrongly accused woman. Hard labourers work in the fields. Out-of-control cat-fights. Mass showering. Suffering at the hands of the head warden. Harsh terrain surrounding the prison to make it hard to escape. A gusty prison break. And finally those corrupted individuals get their up and comings. So basically the heat is on in the banana republic.

“Woman In Cages” is another quick, cheaply done Corman production, but this time Jack Hill didn’t hold the helm. Instead Gerry De Leon was in the director’s chair and he brought to the table a real mean-spirited and quite gloomy Philippine WIP affair. His conventional direction might lack style and cracking energy, but it’s balanced out by its intrusive grittiness. The story by James H. Watkins and David R. Osterhout is rather straightforward with little lead way in its same-old-same-old actions and plodding moments, but plenty of sour and quite outlandish moments do occur. The moral card of injustice that leaks its way in comes off as quite silly and lazy. While, there’s some slight wit evident, it just seems to get derailed. It mainly concentrates on the unpleasantness and sleazy nature that’s drilled in constantly. In the long run these scenes might be effectively crude, but personality does lose out to this rough shtick that really does dry up proceedings. The characters don’t feel as dominating; say in “The Big Doll House”. Some of the actresses of that film do turn up here. Pam Grier plays the nihilistic lesbian head prison guard with such venom, but this hard-boiled devil woman glow does take away from her energetic persona. The crackling stunner Roberta Collins is in fine form as the on edge drug addict and the gorgeously biting Judith M. Brown also appears. Jennifer Gan was decent in the lead role of the glassily clueless Jeff. Music director Tito Arevalo provides a smoking; on-the-ball soundtrack and Felipe Sacdalan’s cinematography methods are unsparingly grounded.

Not one of the best of the sub-genre, but well worth a look for the fans for some glorified badass whipping in this mostly dour WIP outing.

Pam’s No Hope Emerson But Still Pretty Darn Good

For those viewers who are accustomed to cheering on the antics of cult actress Pam Grier on screen, her character in 1972’s “Women in Cages” may come as something of a surprise. Far from her bodacious, sympathetic action heroine, she here plays as nasty a personage as can be imagined: a pot-smoking, white race-hating, lesbian sadist from Harlem named Alabama, who is the matron in an exceptionally sleazy Filipino prison for women. Fans of this type of film–a subgenre that includes other New World films such as “The Big Doll House” (’71) and “The Big Bird Cage” (’72), both with Grier–know what to expect from such: nude shower scenes, sadistic but lovely prison guards, a handful of gorgeous inmates and over-the-top action sequences. While not as much fun as the other two films just named, “Women in Cages” does still provide the requisite goods, and Pam stakes her claim to be placed in the pantheon of such classic female jailers as Dyanne Thorne in the “Ilsa” films, Barbara Steele as the crippled warden in “Caged Heat” (’74), and my favorite, the grotesque matron that Hope Emerson plays in “Caged” (’50). In addition to Pam, the film boasts the presence of cult favorite Roberta Collins, as a smack-addicted rat fink; several catfights; vermin (of the snake, rat, leech and Filipino bounty hunter/rapist varieties); torture by fire, whip, rack, wheel and electricity; AND an oceangoing brothel. Though I still prefer the underrated Grier films “The Arena” (’73) and especially “Black Mama, White Mama” (’72) to this one, “Women in Cages” still proved an entertaining diversion.

Roberta Collins, I love you!

“Women in Cages” reunites the three main cast members of “The Big Doll House” (Pam Grier, Roberta Collins, Judy Brown), but the results suffer from a massive downgrade in quality. Roberta once again steals the show, as she is three times the looker AND the actress that anyone else in the film is. Sometimes I had to pause the tape just to look at her amazing face. She has one great catfight here, but (sadly) she does no arm-twisting this time. Pam Grier is too young for her role and comes across as wooden, and the main lead is forgettable. The film has its moments, but it’s mostly dreary and unpleasant. If it weren’t for Roberta, I’d say just forget about it. (**)