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The Swinging Cheerleaders

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Swinging Cheerleaders
Directed byJack Hill
Written by
  • Jack Hill
    (as Jane Witherspoon)
  • David Kidd
    (as Betty Conklin)
Produced byJohn Prizer
Starring
CinematographyAlfred Taylor
Edited byMort Tubor
Music by
Production
company
Centaur Pictures
Distributed byCentaur Releasing
Release date
  • May 1974 (1974-05)
Running time
91 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Budget$165,000[1]

The Swinging Cheerleaders is a 1974 comedy-drama film written and directed by Jack Hill (who was credited for writing the film as Jane Witherspoon).

The film was released under the titles Locker Room Girls and H.O.T.S. II. It is the sequel of sorts to the 1973 film The Cheerleaders, directed by Paul Glickler; and was itself followed by Revenge of the Cheerleaders (1976), directed by Richard Lerner; and The Great American Girl Robbery (1979) (aka Cheerleaders Wild Weekend), directed by Jeff Werner.

Plot

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In order to write an article for the Mesa University college newspaper on how cheerleading demeans women, Kate (Jo Johnston) infiltrates the cheerleading squad. Only her boyfriend Ron knows about this. The other cheerleaders deal with their own problems: Mary Ann (Colleen Camp) struggles to get her promiscuous football player boyfriend, Buck (Ron Hajek), to propose to her, whom later is seduced by Kate; Lisa (Rosanne Katon) is having an affair with statistics teacher Professor Thorpe (Jason Sommers); and Andrea (Rainbeaux Smith) debates whether or not to stay a virgin. Ron confronts Kate about the affair, Kate says it was for the article and she doesn't like Ron like before. They breakup.

Kate insists Andrea to have one-night stand with a stranger when her ex-boyfriend goes out with a girl. Ron mets with Andrea and they have sex. She insists on having more so Ron invites friends.After Andrea showsup at her ex's door, he beatsup Ron. Meanwhile, Kate uncovers unscrupulous dealings: the football coach (Jack Denton) and college dean (George D. Wallace) are in cahoots in rigging games to favor betting spreads that Professor Thorpe, who is also the bookie, arranges. Later, Prof. Thorpe turns against the coach and dean as they turn against their star quarterback, whom they want to convince to throw the game for a big payoff. When confronted, the quarterback refuses on principle and is arrested by university police, who plant a marijuana joint on him as they carry out the dean's ultimatum. The movie endorses defiance of authority, and questions the ideals of love and virginity.

Cast

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Production

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The Swinging Cheerleaders was shot in Pacific Palisades, California.[2] According to co-writer/director Jack Hill, the film had a 12-day shoot. They started work on the script at the end of January 1974 and the movie was in theatres by May. The original title of the script was Stand Up and Holler, because, as Jack Hill later put it, "Actresses had a way of not wanting to be in a movie called The Swinging Cheerleaders."[3]

Reception

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The Swinging Cheerleaders had a 30-theater opening on September 4, 1974, in the San Francisco exchange territory and grossed $101,855 in its first week. The film also had early success at drive-in theaters in cities such as Salt Lake City; Denver; Phoenix, Arizona; Auburn, Washington; and Portland, Oregon. It opened in 61 theaters in the New England area during the second week of September with 40 of those theaters reporting an estimated $130,000 in grosses.[4]

The film was released again in 1981 as The Locker Room Girls and made $1,150,000.[5]

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Randall Dale Adams and David Harris saw The Swinging Cheerleaders at a Dallas drive-in theater on November 28, 1976; it was the second of a double feature preceded by The Student Body (1976, directed by Gus Trikonis). Both men mentioned their attendance at the drive-in as part of their alibis while being investigated for the murder of Dallas Police Department Officer Robert W. Wood. In the Errol Morris documentary The Thin Blue Line, Adams claimed that he did not feel comfortable with the film's content, and so he and Harris left before it was finished. Clips from the film appear in The Thin Blue Line.[6][7]

References

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  1. ^ Calum Waddell, Jack Hill: The Exploitation and Blaxploitation Master, Film by Film, McFarland, 2009 p174
  2. ^ "The Swinging Cheerleaders (1974)," IMDB.com. Accessed Jan. 20, 2016.
  3. ^ Jack Hill on The Swinging Cheerleaders at Trailers From Hell accessed 10 June 2012
  4. ^ Box Office staff (September 30, 1974). "'Swinging Cheerleaders' Continues High Grosses". BoxOffice. BoxOffice Media. p. 5. ISSN 0006-8527.
  5. ^ Donahue, Suzanne Mary (1987). American film distribution : the changing marketplace. UMI Research Press. p. 297. ISBN 978-0-8357-1776-2. Please note figures are for rentals in US and Canada
  6. ^ Morris, Errol, director. The Thin Blue Line (Miramax, 1988).
  7. ^ Ebert, Roger (September 16, 1988). "The Thin Blue Line". Rogerebert.com. Retrieved August 8, 2024.
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