Let My Puppets Come Explained

Let My Puppets Come
Director:Gerard Damiano
Starring:Al Goldstein
Lynette Sheldon
Penny Nichols
Gerard Damiano
Jonathan Freeman
Cinematography:Beyen C. Mitchell
Editing:Bill Bukowski
Gerard Damiano
Runtime:75 minutes
Country:United States
Language:English

Let My Puppets Come (also called Let My Puppets Go) is a 1976 softcore pornographic comedy film written and directed by Gerard Damiano, and starring Al Goldstein, Lynette Sheldon, Penny Nichols and Damiano. All the sex scenes are between puppets or puppets on human.

Plot

Owing a mob boss half a million dollars that must be paid within 24 hours, a group of executives comes up with ideas for, and films, a pornographic movie.

Cast

Background

While Damiano may have been more noted for the Caballero studios' project Deep Throat, he created Let My Puppets Come using both human and puppet actors, and was perhaps the first of its kind in the United States. The title was intended as a parody of the 1976 Broadway musical Let My People Come and the film was released the same year as the first airing of the television series The Muppet Show, being referred to as "a sexy muppet movie".

Reception

Robert Firsching of Allmovie called the film "light-hearted", noting that the director "uses the novelty of a cast consisting mostly of Muppet-style marionettes". While remarking that the plot is a standard one of producers trying to create a film that will bring attention to their studio, he concludes that "Damiano keeps the style breezy and charming enough that the film is unlikely to offend many potential viewers".

See also