Slumber Party '57 |  | Director: William A. Levey Actors: Mary Ann Appleseth, R.L. Armstrong, Rafael Campos, Larry Gelman, Bridget Hollman Studio: Music Video Dist Category: DVD
List Price: $19.95 Buy New: $14.56 as of 2/10/2010 03:33 EST details You Save: $5.39 (27%)
New (5) from $14.56
Seller: -importcds Rating: 2 reviews Sales Rank: 37858
Format: NTSC Rating: R (Restricted) Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2 Dimensions (in): 7.1 x 5.4 x 0.6
UPC: 018619197691 EAN: 0018619197691 ASIN: B002I41KUA
Theatrical Release Date: 1976 Release Date: October 27, 2009 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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| Customer Reviews: Fun movie with great songs. January 26, 2010 Seattle Samurai (Kirkland, WA United States) I don't think that this DVD version is much better quality wise than my VHS copy, but it is nice to finally have it on DVD. Pity it is in full frame and not in anamorphic wide screen. Really fun to see Debra Winger in her first movie roll also.
Midlevel sex comedy August 26, 2009 a movie fan (Orangevale, CA USA) 4 out of 4 found this review helpful
Probably conceived as a sexier version of American Graffiti, this film seems to have been a modest success when videotape made it more generally available. It stars Debra Winger and a few other people you may recognize. Typical of its genre, it consists of a string of sexy vignettes involving a lot of tease and some nudity. It rises above its competition when one of the girls gets a bare-bottom spanking from her father (always a welcome break in movies about adolescent foibles), and a flimsy-underwear pool party. Ms. Winger's talents are largely wasted here, as she gets one of the least interesting stories. Still, it's an amusing romp with generally good production values.
Oddly, the numerous sexy films of the era (i.e. the ones with no pretense to actual hardcore), mostly comedies, seem to have made it to DVD from the extremes: the higher quality ones (Felicity, Eugenie, Radley Metzger's films) and the lowest quality ones (so-called drive-in films, though usually shown in cheap, inner-city theaters (50 cent triple-bills!)). The mid-range films, low budget but with competent acting and decent quality, seem to have fallen by the digital wayside. How To Succeed With Sex (with its acre of naked coeds running in slow motion) and Hollywood High (not the sequel), and a hundred like them, have disappeared. A pity.
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