
CONFESSIONS OF A YOUNG AMERICAN HOUSEWIFE
Color, 1974, 73 mins. 37 sec.
Directed by Joseph W. Sarno
Starring Rebecca Brooke, Jennifer Welles, Chris Jordan, Eric Edwards, David Hausman
Film Movement / FILMMedia / Something Weird (Blu-ray) (US R0 HD) / WS (1.78:1) (16:9),, Retro-Seduction Cinema (DVD) (US R1 NTSC) / WS (1.78:1) (16:9)SIN IN THE SUBURBS
B&W, 1964, 90 mins. 58 secs.
Directed by Joseph W. Sarno
Starring Audrey Campbell, Alice Linville, W.B. Parker, Dyanne Thorne, Marla Ellis, Richard Tatro, Ella Daphni
Film Movement / FILMMedia / Something Weird (Blu-ray) (US R0 HD) / WS (1.78:1) (16:9), Something Weird / Image Entertainment (DVD) (US R1 NTSC)WARM NIGHTS AND HOT PLEASURES
B&W, 1964, 69 mins. 10 secs.
Directed by Joseph W. Sarno
Starring Marla Ellis, Eve Harris, Sheila Britt, Richard Tatro, Carla Desmond
Film Movement / FILMMedia / Something Weird (Blu-ray) (US R0 HD)
shortly after pioneering sexploitation
director Joe Sarno began dabbling in hardcore, Confessions of a Young American Housewife marked a new period in the director's work as he used some of the more talented adult actors in softcore projects with dramatic roles exploring the evolving attitudes towards everyday sexuality in America. Some of its more notable companion films include Misty, the once-lost Abigail Leslie Is Back in Town, and the quirky The Switch or How to Alter Your Ego, but this particular groundbreaker is still often cited as one of his best. The real centerpiece of the film is its premiere "hotcha!" pairing of two Sarno muses, fragile Rebecca Brooke (a.k.a. Mary Mundum from Radley Metzger's The Image) and sultry, older Jennifer Welles, cast here as a mother and daughter tangling with the swinging lifestyle in upstate New York. The story kicks off with Carole (Brooke) and neighbor Anna (Jordan) conspiring to hook up Carole's husband, Eddie (Hausman), with another nubile chickie upstairs, much to his surprise. Turns out they're all a bunch of swingers who enjoy getting together on the weekends for orgies in the den. Enter Carole's widowed and still attractive mother, Jennifer (Welles), who is initially confused by this newfound sexual liberation but soon dives in headfirst by dallying with a local delivery boy, joining the girls for a sapphic therapy session, and even beginning an affair with Eddie, who wants to run off with her. How will all these carnal shenanigans end?
from the beginning as she leads her cohorts down the road to Bohemia. The sex scenes aren't terribly explicit (though in regular Sarno style some might well have been unsimulated on the set), and Jordan (A Touch of Genie) and her husband,'70s porn vet Eric Edwards, have a lot of fun cast as the doppelganger neighbor couple in the film. As usual Sarno manages to work wonders with a tiny cast and limited settings, including his trademark autumnal forest wanderings and shots of woman analyzing themselves alone in their bedrooms. Extra points for the unorthodox music by Jack Justis, who also scored Misty and Abigail (and whose striking music is included as a bonus CD disc with the DVD version). 
depicted in a series of very, uh, unabashed photos in the liner notes booklet by Sarno expert Michael J. Bowen), and the usual barrage of the label's Sarno trailers.
notorious Olga roughie series) and buxom Dyanne "Ilsa" Thorne, plus a wild third act that famously predates Eyes Wide Shut with its sinister mask
orgy rituals. The overall tone here is more quirky than anything else though as Sarno rips the lid off of the sexual musical chairs going on in the average American neighborhood. Geraldine (Campbell) seems like a perfectly normal housewife, spending each morning making breakfast for her husband and daughter Kathy (Linville) before they head off for the day. In reality she likes to spend her alone time with any men who might be around, even if it's a schoolboy who's cutting class and likes to do the twist in her living room. Next door, Lisa (Ellis) has a similar modus operandi, using her sexual wiles to keep her family financially above water. Enter Yvette (Thorne) and Louis (Parker), a couple of Machiavellian swingers who unite the community into an anonymous sex club where a number of skeletons in everyone's closet start tumbling out.
Weird's late and much-missed Mike Vraney, and the invaluable Frank Henenlotter. It's a priceless track now given how many of the participants we've lost as they cover the film's distribution history (only 18 prints ever existed), the real-life inspiration behind the story,
and the ins and outs of the exploitation scene at the time with other colorful filmmakers in the mix. WARM NIGHTS AND HOT PLEASURES