

SWEET TRASH
Color, 1970, 78m.
Directed by John Hayes
Starring Duncan McLeod (as Patrick Shea), William Connors, Mary McGee, Peter Balachoff, Hermy Llorends, William Gary
THE HANG UP
Color, 1970, 75m.
Directed by John Hayes
Starring Sebastian Gregory, Sharon Matt,
Genene Cooper, Peter Balachoff, Luke Perry, Bonnie Clark
Vinegar Syndrome (DVD) (US R0 NTSC) / WS (1.85:1) (16:9)

Before he created one of the most memorable bloodsucker films of the decade with 1972's Grave of the Vampire, director John Hayes was already a seasoned exploitation vet with plenty of experience in delivering sex and violence with an eccentric twist. For example, his nutty Nazi outing The Cut-throats (released on DVD by Vinegar Syndrome) used its impoverished budget to push the sleaze factor as far as an American film could go in 1969. The following year he flummoxed audiences with no less than five films: Dream No Evil, the wacko softcore offerings Fandango and All the Lovin' Kinfolk, and the double feature we have here, a pair of portraits of vice and debauchery at the end of the free love era.
since school.
young lady from Salinas employed by the local massage parlor / brothel, who claims she's only been in this racket for a week. He slips Angel out of the place before a raid and takes her under his wing, with the establishment's face-painted
master of ceremonies (Balachoff again) watching the whole thing from afar. He soon chastises her for taking the trash out in her her slip, but she calls him a puritan and argues, "I have a good shape and I like showing it!" Who can argue? Their attempts to play house thaw out when she reveals her actual name, Laurie, and pacifies him by soaping him up in the shower. The relationship softens up his violent streak at work, much to the chagrin of his partner, and he even starts hanging out with Angel's friends who enjoy regular afternoon activities like topless horseback riding. As it turns out, the girl's hiding a sordid secret that could take Bob down for good, which leads to a third act you'll never believe involving a bevy of scantily-clad models parading around a dirt road, jazz music, blackmail, a tragic car chase, and one of the tackiest lines in exploitation history, "I'll rape you good!"
regular member of the Hayes stable since Help Wanted Female and does a good job of showing off his character's hot-tempered side, with a couple of violent outbursts that send the handheld camera careening. Matt (who had just appeared in H.G. Lewis's Linda and Abilene and The Ecstasies of Women) is no great shakes as an actress, but fortunately the plot has enough leeway to allow her stilted, often unconvincing delivery to work as part of the character. Fun stuff and never dull.