Black Lolita Explained

Black Lolita
Director:Stephen Gibson
Producer:Stephen Gibson (Producer)
Parker Johnson (Executive producer)
Starring:Yolanda Love
Ed Cheatwood
Susan Ayers
Joey Ginza
Music:Steve Dexter
Cinematography:Stephen Gibson
Distributor:Cinema Epoch, Parliament, Pathfinder Pictures, Phaedra Cinema
Runtime:85 mins
Country:United States
Language:English

Black Lolita is a 3D blaxploitation film directed by Stephen Gibson. It was released in 1975 under that title. Some time later, new footage was added to create another film, which was released under the title of Wildcat Women. It is about a singer who returns to her home town to fight the gangsters who have taken it over. It stars Yolanda Love, Ed Cheatwood, Susan Ayers and Joey Ginza.

Premise

A beautiful singer whose career is on the rise finds out that her relatives are being harassed by criminals. She returns to her hometown to take revenge on them.[1] [2] She puts together a team to take them on, and Buddha, the criminal boss who murdered her uncle, from whom he was trying to extort money.[3] [4]

Background

The film is also called Bad Lolita, and was released in 1975. The original was released in 3D.[5] [6] It was announced in the January 20, 1975 issue of Box that the film was possibly the first black action movie to be filmed in 3D and that it was scheduled to open in Chicago in the near future.[7]

At the time when the film was made, Blaxploitation films were still very popular. Producer / director Stephen Gibson thought that some other films of that genre, like the Rudy Ray Moore films, weren't that good, and he thought he could work in that area as long as he delivered. He didn't do enough market research, and the film sank.[8] The film played at Detroit's Grand Circus theater where popcorn was thrown at the screen and seats were damaged.[9] Because he owned the picture, Gibson only had to worry about getting back his own money. He decided to change the title and shoot extra footage and other footage to add the story. The finished product was a different film altogether. It was called Wildcat Women. Black Lolita and Wildcat Women are actually two different films.[10]

Music

The music for the film was composed by Joe Greene, Marva Farmer and Steve Dexter.[11] Additional music was provided by The Charades. The two songs they contributed were the title song and the love theme [12]

Screenings

The film was screened at the Plaza in Detroit in June 1975, and was doubled with Quadroon, which explored the status of mixed-race women in early 1800s New Orleans.[13] Also in Detroit, it screened at the Grand Circus where it didn't do well.[14]

Cast and crew

Cast

Crew

[15]

External links

Notes and References

  1. The Paris News, June 8, 1975 - Page 37
  2. [Letterboxd]
  3. [Turner Classic Movies]
  4. Nostalgia Central - Black Lolita (1975)
  5. Ashley Marcelline's Black Film & Video Guide, Ashley Marcelline, Black Cinema Network, 1994 - Page 23 Black Lolita/Bad Lolita
  6. Blaxploitation cinema:
    the essential reference guide
    , Josiah Howard - Page 100
  7. [American Film Institute]
  8. 3-D Filmmakers: Conversations with Creators of Stereoscopic Motion Pictures, By Ray Zone - Steve Gibson Page 31 - 33
  9. 3D Revolution: The History of Modern Stereoscopic Cinema, By Ray Zone - Page 105
  10. 3-D Filmmakers: Conversations with Creators of Stereoscopic Motion Pictures, By Ray Zone - Steve Gibson Page 31 - 33
  11. RingosTrack - Black Lolita Soundtrack (1975) OST
  12. Tulare Advance-Register, Friday, February 13, 1987 - Page 6 Accent on entertainment, 30 years of The Charades
  13. The Paris News, June 8, 1975 - Page 37
  14. 3D Revolution: The History of Modern Stereoscopic Cinema, By Ray Zone - Page 105
  15. [British Film Institute]