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      rottentomatoes.com

      • The Big Doll House has a small place in exploitation cinema history as it was the one whose success sparked off the women in prison cycle of the nineteen-seventies.
      www.thespinningimage.co.uk › cultfilms › displaycultfilm
  1. I have to say this film is an exploitation movie, and therefore has some aspects that many people might find objectionable -- gratuitous nudity, sexual assault and some scenes of torture. This is not just a fun film to watch with your kids.

    • Jack Hill
    • 56 sec
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  3. English. Budget. $125,000 [1] or $200,000 [2] Box office. $10 million [3] The Big Doll House is a 1971 American women-in-prison film starring Pam Grier, Judy Brown, Roberta Collins, Brooke Mills, and Pat Woodell. The film follows six female inmates through daily life in a gritty, unidentified tropical prison. Later the same year, the film Women ...

  4. The Big Doll House (1971) Trailer. Watch on. It begins with Collier (Judy Brown), a very pretty murderess, being sentenced to a Filipino prison.

  5. In the 1970’s a new era of exploitation genre emerged a chain of successful franchises, the Women In Prison movies that started in the drive-in circuts has become a winning formula worldwide. The Big Doll House which was released in America in 1971 tells the story of a group of women surviving the harsh treatments in an all female prison.

  6. The Big Doll House was directed by Jack Hill, one of the most notable exploitation directors in history. It's a story about a women's prison in the Philippines and a group of women attempting to break out of it.

  7. She is hung naked in a bamboo cage in the sun, then tortured nearly to death, but refuses to reveal Rafael's whereabouts. While Lucian performs her duties with relish, a masked figure watches from a chair. Bodine is thrown back in the cell, where Karen ministers to her.

  8. The Big Doll House is a 1971 American women-in-prison film starring Pam Grier, Judy Brown, Roberta Collins, Brooke Mills, and Pat Woodell. The film follows six female inmates through daily life in a gritty, unidentified tropical prison.

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