Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueA poor-little-rich-girl feels alienated by her mother and enacts a string of torment on her fellow pupils at a girls' boarding school, increasingly aggravating them until she goes too far.A poor-little-rich-girl feels alienated by her mother and enacts a string of torment on her fellow pupils at a girls' boarding school, increasingly aggravating them until she goes too far.A poor-little-rich-girl feels alienated by her mother and enacts a string of torment on her fellow pupils at a girls' boarding school, increasingly aggravating them until she goes too far.
- Réalisation
- Scénario
- Casting principal
Barboura Morris
- Rita Joyce
- (as Barboura O'Neill)
Barbara Cowan
- Ellie Marshall
- (as Barbara Crane)
Jeane Wood
- Mrs. Fessenden - housemother
- (as Jeanne Wood)
Avis à la une
I didn't know what to expect before watching this movie. But with Susan Cabot's great performance as the main character Sabra Tanner I really enjoyed this old Roger Corman classic.
Sabra is well...not a nice person at all. She is spoiled rotten and rich and is being cut off from the family's money after her mother (Fay Baker) advises her of this. She is in a sorority, but tries to get the better in every situation she is in including blackmail, attempting to be romantically involved with roommate Rita's (Barboura Morris) man Mort played by Dick Miller and yes even spanking with a paddle one of the other sorority girls. It comes down to Cabot's performance though. She keeps things interesting and Corman keeps things at a brisk pace as the movie only runs just over an hour.
Sabra is well...not a nice person at all. She is spoiled rotten and rich and is being cut off from the family's money after her mother (Fay Baker) advises her of this. She is in a sorority, but tries to get the better in every situation she is in including blackmail, attempting to be romantically involved with roommate Rita's (Barboura Morris) man Mort played by Dick Miller and yes even spanking with a paddle one of the other sorority girls. It comes down to Cabot's performance though. She keeps things interesting and Corman keeps things at a brisk pace as the movie only runs just over an hour.
Susan Cabot stars as a spoiled rich college girl names Sabra. As an upperclassman she like to taunt and order about a fattish pledge named Ellie (Barbara Cowan), which irritates fellow student Rita (Barboura Morris). Sabra just seems to spread misery everywhere she goes.
Even a meeting with her mother (Fay Baker) leads to mama's tearing up Sabra's monthly allowance check. This just makes Sabra meaner and she eventually paddles Ellie and has a cat fight with Rita. When she learns that dopey Terry is pregnant, Sabra launches a plan to blackmail Mort (Dick Miller) and extort $1,000 from him by claiming he's the father.
Later on, at the beach, Terry goes into a funk and decides to jump off a cliff. Will anything save her?
Fay Baker is fun as the mean mama; everyone else is terrible. Cabot and Morris were also in THE WASP WOMAN together.
Even a meeting with her mother (Fay Baker) leads to mama's tearing up Sabra's monthly allowance check. This just makes Sabra meaner and she eventually paddles Ellie and has a cat fight with Rita. When she learns that dopey Terry is pregnant, Sabra launches a plan to blackmail Mort (Dick Miller) and extort $1,000 from him by claiming he's the father.
Later on, at the beach, Terry goes into a funk and decides to jump off a cliff. Will anything save her?
Fay Baker is fun as the mean mama; everyone else is terrible. Cabot and Morris were also in THE WASP WOMAN together.
Corman is just here to inform of real social dangers, not to exploitatively take advantage of a trend to quickly sell a frugally made film and make a profit as swiftly as possible. He's here for the social good! Okay, he's not. However, I will say that the script Corman is working from, written by Leo Lieberman and Ed Waters, is more grounded than the work that Charles Griffith had been writing. It's also kind of confusing with a couple of characters that probably should have been combined while also being ultimately purely exploitation just underneath the surface. It exists in this weird middle ground between serious drama and exploitation that neither the script nor Corman really know how to bridge. It's interesting and kind of works, but that dichotomy undoes the film to a certain degree.
At an all girls' college, Sabra (Susan Cabot) belongs to a sorority and is roommates with Ellie (Barbara Cowan). Ellie's mousy and reserved. Sabra is pretty much psychotic but very composed about it. Sabra just likes to hurt people, and the film is about her exploring that, fighting it, and just kind of doing it even when she's helping. Sabra as played by Cabot is really the heart of the film, and had it been given the proper central focus and depth of writing necessary, it would have been a great rock to build a very good film. Instead, there's no real depth to the character and it's ends up a decent rock on which to build a kind of interesting film.
Sabra ends up with a key antagonist in Tina (June Kennedy), a girl running for class president and with the boyfriend Mort (Dick Miller). Tina views Sabra's mistreatment of Ellie, in particular a hazing moment where Sabra just straight up spanks Ellie with a paddle emblazoned with the Sorority's Greek letters (not exploitation, social commentary this is). Sabra decides to take out her anger on Tina by stealing her boyfriend.
Confronted with her bad behavior, Sabra runs to her mother (Fay Baker), looking for understanding or an explanation for her sadistic behavior who offers none. She's then presented with the troubles of Rita (Barboura Morris) who has gotten pregnant (the scandal! In the 1950s) and convinces her to blackmail Mort into giving her $1000. Everything goes wrong, there's a suicide attempt. And we end with Sabra being faced with her own comeuppance.
It's decent. The writing is something of a mess. I think Tina and Ellie should have been combined into one character because separate they don't really do that much narratively. I also think more of Tina's time should be focused on Rita since Rita ends up the focus of the final long stretch of the film. It ultimately feels like there's just this indecision about where the central conflict is, probably stemming from the idea that Sabra's anger is omnidirectional. However, you can still sell that with smaller vignettes as long as there's one central focus for the audience to latch onto, and since Rita ends up last and with the biggest drama around her interactions with Sabra, it should be Rita.
So, once again, a film almost works but is held back by the writing. Corman shows his craft once again, though. I was struck by a series of shots late in the film with a group of girls advancing on Sabra with matching, opposite camera movements that really complimented each other. That feels like something he just came up with on the day because it looked good and he could pull it off quickly, and it works.
So, another middling overall effort that could have been more had Corman allowed more time to further address issues with the script. I really wish he would slow down, but I am getting towards the end of 1957, the year he released eight films. Hopefully the slowed output of 1958 will show the kinds of care and attention he needs to take things up just that one more notch.
At an all girls' college, Sabra (Susan Cabot) belongs to a sorority and is roommates with Ellie (Barbara Cowan). Ellie's mousy and reserved. Sabra is pretty much psychotic but very composed about it. Sabra just likes to hurt people, and the film is about her exploring that, fighting it, and just kind of doing it even when she's helping. Sabra as played by Cabot is really the heart of the film, and had it been given the proper central focus and depth of writing necessary, it would have been a great rock to build a very good film. Instead, there's no real depth to the character and it's ends up a decent rock on which to build a kind of interesting film.
Sabra ends up with a key antagonist in Tina (June Kennedy), a girl running for class president and with the boyfriend Mort (Dick Miller). Tina views Sabra's mistreatment of Ellie, in particular a hazing moment where Sabra just straight up spanks Ellie with a paddle emblazoned with the Sorority's Greek letters (not exploitation, social commentary this is). Sabra decides to take out her anger on Tina by stealing her boyfriend.
Confronted with her bad behavior, Sabra runs to her mother (Fay Baker), looking for understanding or an explanation for her sadistic behavior who offers none. She's then presented with the troubles of Rita (Barboura Morris) who has gotten pregnant (the scandal! In the 1950s) and convinces her to blackmail Mort into giving her $1000. Everything goes wrong, there's a suicide attempt. And we end with Sabra being faced with her own comeuppance.
It's decent. The writing is something of a mess. I think Tina and Ellie should have been combined into one character because separate they don't really do that much narratively. I also think more of Tina's time should be focused on Rita since Rita ends up the focus of the final long stretch of the film. It ultimately feels like there's just this indecision about where the central conflict is, probably stemming from the idea that Sabra's anger is omnidirectional. However, you can still sell that with smaller vignettes as long as there's one central focus for the audience to latch onto, and since Rita ends up last and with the biggest drama around her interactions with Sabra, it should be Rita.
So, once again, a film almost works but is held back by the writing. Corman shows his craft once again, though. I was struck by a series of shots late in the film with a group of girls advancing on Sabra with matching, opposite camera movements that really complimented each other. That feels like something he just came up with on the day because it looked good and he could pull it off quickly, and it works.
So, another middling overall effort that could have been more had Corman allowed more time to further address issues with the script. I really wish he would slow down, but I am getting towards the end of 1957, the year he released eight films. Hopefully the slowed output of 1958 will show the kinds of care and attention he needs to take things up just that one more notch.
This is one of my all-time favorite movies. It's a masterpiece. I think Susan Cabot is right up there with Faye Dunaway in "Mommie Dearest," and Lili Taylor in "I Shot Andy Warhol" in her role as Sabra. I think anyone with any damned sense can see him/herself in this young woman. Call me disturbed, or twisted, but that's just the way it is. The scenes with Sabra & her mother are priceless, as are the interactions (and altercations!) between Sabra & Rita, her roommate. It's hard to believe Corman made this film in 1956; it holds up so well. If you miss this, you are missing out on life itself.
Stunning Susan Cabot is Sabra, a troubled young woman indeed. Despised by her mother and hated by her sorority sisters, Sabra has plenty of dough but no friends and nothing but hatred for the world and everybody in it, including herself. She tortures the poor chubby li'l pledge that has been assigned to her as a "little sister", at one point even giving her *gasp* a good spanking! Events soon spiral out of her control, though, and her slippery slope of loathing soon leads her to blackmail, extortion, and revenge. And when I say "soon", I mean "soon", because the whole darn movie is only 60 minutes long! I like SORORITY GIRL a lot. In addition to Miss Cabot (who gives her best performance ever here, despite the fact that at age 30 she was a little long-in-the-tooth to be a sorority girl), you'll find Barboura Morris (the sexiest of all '50s AIP starlets, in this guy's opinion), June Kenney (well remembered from ATTACK OF THE PUPPET PEOPLE), and the ubiquitous Dick Miller (somewhat surprisingly playing a character not named Walter Paisley).
Roger Corman said that AIP presented him with the script and asked him to make the picture quickly and cheaply (no surprise there); Corman was used to being involved in his screenplays, so he worked on it as quickly as he could while filming commenced. He shot the picture at the USC campus and rented, rather than built on a set, the sorority house, to accomplish maximum frugality. It gives the film a nice college atmosphere (watch the cast hanging out at USC landmarks just to show they were really on campus).
The film's hour running time allows for no humor, and suspense builds nicely to the picture's climax. (I shouldn't say NO humor; look for the lamps in Sabra's room: they are ballerina legs with tutus for shades!) In the end, when all of the sorority sisters finally confront Sabra on the beach ("You're not human you're something the SEA cast up!") I actually felt sorry for the poor little sociopath.
SORORITY GIRL originally played as a double-feature with MOTORCYCLE GANG, and that film is also recommended.
Roger Corman said that AIP presented him with the script and asked him to make the picture quickly and cheaply (no surprise there); Corman was used to being involved in his screenplays, so he worked on it as quickly as he could while filming commenced. He shot the picture at the USC campus and rented, rather than built on a set, the sorority house, to accomplish maximum frugality. It gives the film a nice college atmosphere (watch the cast hanging out at USC landmarks just to show they were really on campus).
The film's hour running time allows for no humor, and suspense builds nicely to the picture's climax. (I shouldn't say NO humor; look for the lamps in Sabra's room: they are ballerina legs with tutus for shades!) In the end, when all of the sorority sisters finally confront Sabra on the beach ("You're not human you're something the SEA cast up!") I actually felt sorry for the poor little sociopath.
SORORITY GIRL originally played as a double-feature with MOTORCYCLE GANG, and that film is also recommended.
Histoire
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesBarbara Cowan's debut.
- ConnexionsFeatured in Des ovnis, des monstres et du sexe - Le cinéma selon Roger Corman (2011)
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- How long is Sorority Girl?Alimenté par Alexa
Détails
- Date de sortie
- Pays d’origine
- Langue
- Aussi connu sous le nom de
- Sorority House
- Lieux de tournage
- Société de production
- Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro
- Durée1 heure 1 minute
- Couleur
- Rapport de forme
- 1.33 : 1
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By what name was Sorority Girl (1957) officially released in Canada in English?
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