![]() So while that's a sad conclusion to a cult career, we still had works such as this to remember her in her prime, even if we couldn't ask her what she really thought of movies like Chatterbox. She would give up acting two years later, fall into obscurity, and just as interest in her work was beginning to pick up again ( Bridget Fonda's character in Jackie Brown was a tribute to her) it was discovered she had died in 2006. Candice Rialson was one of the few actresses around who could have handled this role with just the right mix of brightness and embarrassment, a popular fixture in many an exploitation flick in this decade though this would lilkely be her most infamous movie. In a reversal of the premise of the porn blockbuster Deep Throat, Penelope finds her vagina is speaking to her, and not only her, as she is intent on holding ribald conversation with anyone around. Not that many would have tried the idea after the era this hailed from had played itself out, and its cartoonish quality meant it contained a weird innocence in spite of its subject matter, which had apparently been inspired by a French film of a couple of years previous, the more forthrightly-titled Pussy Talk. It would not have been made before that decade, and after it any humour, such as it was, would have been too knowing, too studied in its kitsch, to be entertaining. She is understandably upset about this, because she didn't think she had said anything at all, so where was the voice coming from? On entering the bathroom, the awful truth becomes clear.Ĭhatterbox! is a movie that could only have been made like this in the nineteen-seventies, a sex comedy where the raunch was so idiotic that it actually carried an odd charm. Penelope Pittman ( Candice Rialson) is enjoying a night of passion with her boyfriend Ted ( Perry Bullington) when something strange occurs: they are just relaxing in their post-coital glow when a voice pipes up and points out that he simply wasn't all that good, which offends him so much that he gets up, puts on his clothes and leaves, telling Penelope that he never wants to see her again. What's So Funny About Brit Horror? Vampira and Bloodbath at the House of Death on ArrowĬandice Rialson, Larry Gelman, Jane Kean, Perry Bullington, Arlene Martel, Michael Taylor, Cynthia Hoppenfeld, Robert Lipton, Rip Taylor, Irwin Corey, Sandra Gould, Trent Dolan, Lois Walden, Gloria Victor, Jessica Stuart, Bob DeSimone, Biff Warren Sex vs Violence: In the Realm of the Senses on Blu-ray Super Sammo: Warriors Two and The Prodigal Son on Blu-ray ![]() Moon Night - Space 1999: Super Space Theater on Blu-ray The Call of Nostalgia: Ghostbusters Afterlife on Blu-ray Uncomfortable Truths: Three Shorts by Andrea Arnold on MUBI Not So Permissive: The Lovers! on Blu-ray Two Christopher Miles Shorts: The Six-Sided Triangle/Rhythm 'n' Greens on Blu-ray You'll Never Guess Which is Sammo: Skinny Tiger and Fatty Dragon on Blu-ray The Ecstasy of Cosmic Boredom: Dark Star on ArrowĪ Frosty Reception: South and The Great White Silence on Blu-ray on 4K UHDĪ Woman's Viewfinder: The Camera is Ours on DVDĬhaplin's Silent Pursuit: Modern Times on Blu-ray Your Rules are Really Beginning to Annoy Me: Escape from L.A. Suave and Sophisticated: The Persuaders! Take 50 on Blu-ray The Dead of Night: In Cold Blood on Blu-ray The Movie Damned: Cursed Films II on Shudder State of the 70s: Play for Today Volume 3 on Blu-ray Monster Fun: Three Monster Tales of Sci-Fi Terror on Blu-ray Serious Comedy: The Wrong Arm of the Law on Blu-rayĭC Showcase: Constantine - The House of Mystery and More on Blu-ray ![]() Little Cat Feat: Stephen King's Cat's Eye on 4K UHD 3 From Arrow Player: Sweet Sugar, Girls Nite Out and Manhattan Baby
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