Saturday, September 1, 2018

Blu-ray Review: Golden Temple Amazons

Golden Temple Amazons is one of the odder films in Jess Franco’s work, in part because there is some question about how much of it Franco actually directed. A credit at the beginning calls the film a “Jess Frank Presentation,” but then James Gartner is credited as the director. James Gartner is not one of Franco’s many pseudonyms, but is actually a pseudonym for Alain Payet. Some claim that Jess Franco directed the entire thing, while others believe the film was co-directed, and others believe that Franco began the film (under a different title), and then Alain Payet finished it. It was released in 1986, but has many similarities to Diamonds Of Kilimandjaro, which came out in 1983, so perhaps that last idea is the correct one.

As the film opens, several women are riding horses, their naked breasts bouncing in slow motion. When they arrive at the home of the Simpsons, they demand that Mr. Simpson comes out. When he complies, they put an arrow in his chest. His wife is likewise killed. As the women leave, the couple’s young daughter, Liana, comes round from the back of the house to discover her parents’ bodies. The film then jumps to several years later, and Liana (Analia Ivars, but credited as Joan Virly) has grown into an attractive woman who befriends and rides elephants. (There is some really nice elephant footage, marred only by one of the worst soundtracks to ever make it into a film.) Liana is friendly with a wide variety of animals, actually, including giraffes and a chimpanzee (or is it a monkey?). Father Johnstone (Olivier Mathot, but credited as Oliver Matthew, who also appeared in Diamonds Of Kilimandjaro) arrives at the house. He was a friend to Mr. Simpson and has arrived to find out what happened to him. (Took him long enough, eh?) As he reads aloud to Liana from her father’s diary (her parents didn’t teach her how to read), we are treated to a flashback of the action in which Mr. Simpson first encounters the Amazon women and discovers their great caverns of gold. The women warn him to return the gold he’s taken and to leave the area, but he doesn’t heed their warnings. He’s kind of an asshole, actually. And his wife fires a gun in the women’s direction, making her not too sympathetic either. So, as with Diamonds Of Kilimandjaro, we quickly find ourselves siding with the tribe and not the so-called “civilized” man. Anyway, Liana vows revenge on the women who killed her shitty parents.

As she sets out on her search, she is almost immediately captured in a net by a tribe of men. But it turns out they only stopped her out of concern for her. (That’s how my friends try to keep me from making mistakes too!) Their plan doesn’t work, of course, and one of the tribe’s members ends up accompanying her on her quest. He is the tribe’s medicine man, and he is apparently there mainly for comic relief. They are also joined by a group of archeologists (after Liana was captured by their porters – you know, for a girl who grew up without parents in the jungle, she’s not very savvy about her surroundings). And the group goes off in search of adventure, a lost civilization and revenge.

Quite a bit of the film is dull and silly. The gold aluminum foil on the walls looks ridiculous, and the guy who is supposed to be hammering it is clearly hitting it gingerly so as not to tear it. And the cheap blond wigs often look terrible. But still, there are certainly some interesting moments and elements. The Amazons are actually ruled by a mysterious man named Uruck (William Berger) and his mistress Rena, a woman who worries that Liana will take her place. And the moment when Uruck takes Liana into his chamber is handled really well. We see that he rapes her, but the camera remains outside the room, with the guards and with Rena, who is humiliated after losing a fight with Liana. She is also humiliated and distraught because she is being replaced at that very moment. She is defeated, and Liana is being defeated, raped by the man who ordered the deaths of her parents. It’s an intriguing and strange and effective scene. This film also has a surprising amount of cool footage of animals. And remember, when things get weird: “Forget your archeology, let’s get out of here.”

Golden Temple Amazons is scheduled to be released on Blu-ray on September 11, 2018 through MVD Visual as part of the MVD Classics series. The disc provides the option of watching the film dubbed in English or in its original French. The film’s trailer is included, as well as the trailer for Jess Franco’s Diamonds Of Kilimandjaro.

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