Very young seductresses
Movie | |
---|---|
Original title | Very young seductresses |
Country of production | Germany , Switzerland |
original language | German |
Publishing year | 1971 |
length | 74 minutes |
Age rating | FSK 16 |
Rod | |
Director | Michael Thomas |
script | Manfred Gregor |
production | Avco Film, Berlin ( Erwin C. Dietrich ) Afiba Film, Zurich (Erwin C. Dietrich) |
music | Walter Baumgartner |
camera | Peter Baumgartner |
occupation | |
|
Bloody Seductresses is a German-Swiss sexploitation film from 1971.
action
At the editorial meeting of a magazine called Constanze they are looking for new material. You decide to talk about very young seductresses around 14. Each of the editors present suggests a story, which is immediately visualized with lots of off- comments. Soccer professionals fall victim to the seductresses, as do law students, nude photographers, car drivers (to whom they are rented out by gas station tenants) and joggers. The student Ilse fails because of the steadfastness of her German teacher, but then takes him to court for his reputation and his profession. Finally, Susanne seduces her lesbian piano teacher so that she no longer has to rehearse.
Production and legal aftermath
Erwin C. Dietrich wanted to tie in with Wolf C. Hartwig's schoolgirl report series with Bloody Seductresses . The German poster motif featured the addition: What parents need to know . The first production company was Avco Film, Dietrich's Berlin recording studio.
According to the opening credits, the plot is based on a series of articles of the same name in the illustrated weekend . It premiered on July 30, 1971. The successful film, which received a second and a third part in 1972, met opposition from the organization pro Veritate and the federal prosecutor Hans Walder in Switzerland . On January 24, 1972, it was declared banned and confiscated in the Etoile cinema in Niederdorf . During the night, Dietrich removed the objectionable areas under supervision and brought the film back to the cinema the next day with the advertisement “We're back!”. In Switzerland alone, the young seductresses counted 500,000 visitors.
On August 18, 1973, the Tages-Anzeiger said that the Federal Supreme Court had protected the federal prosecutor's complaint . It is objectively clear that the film in question is limited to provocative and disgusting and disgusting representations. On October 11, 1974, Dietrich was prosecuted by the federal court for "indecent publications". The individual films contained a whole series of offensive scenes which “viewed as a whole represented a serious violation of sexual shame”. Dietrich tried to talk to the members of pro Veritate , but this was not very productive.
The film had around 2.5 million visitors in the Federal Republic of Germany.
Reviews
The lexicon of international films describes the production as "a cheap sex film that speculates on the success of the report wave."
literature
- Benedikt Eppenberger, Daniel Stapfer: Girls, Machos and Monets. The incredible story of the Swiss cinema entrepreneur Erwin C. Dietrich , Verlag Scharfe Stiefel, ISBN 3-033-00960-3 , pp. 81–83
Web links
- Blutjunge temptresses in the Internet Movie Database (English)
- Very young seductresses at filmportal.de
Individual evidence
- ↑ Release certificate for very young seductresses . Voluntary self-regulation of the film industry , February 2006 (PDF; re-examination, formerly FSK 18; test number: 43 783 DVD).
- ^ Benedikt Eppenberger, Daniel Stapfer: Mädchen, Machos und Moneten , Verlag Scharfe Stiefel, p. 81
- ^ Benedikt Eppenberger, Daniel Stapfer: Mädchen, Machos und Moneten , Verlag Scharfe Stiefel, p. 82
- ↑ The most successful German films since 1968 on insidekino.com
- ↑ Young seductresses. In: Lexicon of International Films . Film service , accessed August 23, 2017 .