Rollerbabies (1976)
Genre: Adult | Comedy | Sci-Fi
Country: USA | Director: Carter Stevens
Language: English |Subtitles: None
Aspect ratio: Widescreen 1.85:1 |Length: 86mn
Dvdrip H264 Mkv - 841x474 - 29.970fps - 1.50gb
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0127764/
Includes Audio Commentary with Carter Stevens
(Second Audio Track)
Includes Audio Commentary with Carter Stevens
(Second Audio Track)
In the future sexual intercourse is outlawed because of overpopulation and almost everyone has to take a special anti-aphrodisiac pill in order to suppress any carnal urges. The only form of coitus allowed is done by performers on live TV broadcasts as an aid to masturbation. Shrewd, but down on his luck television executive Sherman Frobish (a lively and engaging performance by Alan Marlow), the man behind the #1 rated program "The *Beep* and Suck Show," comes up with the bright idea of a live sex show in which the participants copulate while racing around on roller skates in order to salvage his floundering career.
Director Carter Stevens and screenwriter Wesson Smith joyfully mine an admittedly crude'n'rude, yet still funny and amiable line in blithely lowbrow humor that delivers several sidesplitting silly gags (the bit about telepathic fellatio is downright hilarious and the nutty grand finale Rollerbabies live broadcast contest complete with enthusiastic play-by-play commentary is likewise gut-busting). The expected explicit sex scenes which are every bit as raw'n'raunchy as they ought to be. The cast play the amusingly dopey material with winning gusto, with especially stand-out contributions by Susan McBain as sultry undercover CIA agent Miss Vice Squad, Terri Hall as merry, wide-eyed virginal innocent Hope Chest, striking bald African-American Yolanda Savalas as Frobish's ditsy secretary Alice Kojak, Mary Stuart as lusty starlet Taffy Pull, David Williams as famous stud Jonathan Z, and a gloriously hammy Philip De Hatte as wacky mad scientist Professor Irving Rocksov. Bruce G. Sparks' cinematography makes nice occasional use of strenuous slow motion during key "climactic" moments. The funky-grinding score hits the lowdown groovy spot. Best of all, a positively infectious sense of good-natured and energetic naughty fun pervades throughout and thus makes this flick an absolute screwy ball to watch from start to finish. A total hoot.
Rollerbabies (1976)
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