
1937
Do Native Women Live With Apes?
This little-seen compilation 'educational' documentary from producer Samuel Cummins was an independently-produced jungle exploitation film typical of the 30s. It was inspired after the success of the pre-Code exploitation film Ingagi (1931) about gorilla-worshipping Congolese native women, and after the success of RKO's King Kong (1933). The film speculated that there was social/sexual intercourse or matings between African women and gorillas, after a Ubangi maiden was abducted by a gorilla and carried off into the jungle. It was considered scandalous and "off-color" by the Board of Review because of the theme of "the mating of women with wild animals and because of nude figures in the picture." The film included sensational content (ineptly interspersed with horrible stock footage) including a few shots of topless native women (censored versions superimposed fake ferns over bare breasts) and lusty gorillas (men in monkey suits). (filmsite.org)

Mad Max

Most Beautiful Island

General Hercules

Tokolosh

Nurse Diary: Beast Afternoon

Sex on the Beach

The Scent Of Death 2

Furia asesina

Samarang

A Virgin Among the Living Dead

Blood of 1000 Virgins

Snuff 102

Brain Sex

The Wild and the Naked

Thriller: A Cruel Picture

Mad Max 2

Clawing! A Journey Through the Spanish Horror

Trees

Pandora Peaks

Biohazard