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Girls Are for Loving

  • 1973
  • R
  • 1h 35m
IMDb RATING
5.2/10
278
YOUR RATING
Girls Are for Loving (1973)
CrimeDrama

Ginger is back, more daring than before as she takes you through heart pounding scenes of violence and gripping lust. Ginger's hard hitting display of martial arts could be performed by nobo... Read allGinger is back, more daring than before as she takes you through heart pounding scenes of violence and gripping lust. Ginger's hard hitting display of martial arts could be performed by nobody more beautiful.Ginger is back, more daring than before as she takes you through heart pounding scenes of violence and gripping lust. Ginger's hard hitting display of martial arts could be performed by nobody more beautiful.

  • Director
    • Don Schain
  • Writer
    • Don Schain
  • Stars
    • Cheri Caffaro
    • Timothy Brown
    • Sheila Leighton
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.2/10
    278
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Don Schain
    • Writer
      • Don Schain
    • Stars
      • Cheri Caffaro
      • Timothy Brown
      • Sheila Leighton
    • 12User reviews
    • 6Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos6

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    Top cast13

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    Cheri Caffaro
    • Ginger McAllister
    Timothy Brown
    Timothy Brown
    • Clay Bowers
    Sheila Leighton
    • Ronnie St. Clair
    • (as Jocelyn Peters)
    Scott Ellsworth
    • James L. Whitney III
    Fred Vincent
    • William Henderson, Jr.
    Robert C. Jefferson
    • Mateo
    Rod Loomis
    Rod Loomis
    • Mark Broderick
    Larry Douglas
    • U.S. Cabinet Member
    Anthony C. Cannon
    • Neil Barrington
    William Grannell
    • Jason Varone
    Yuki Shimoda
    Yuki Shimoda
    • Ambassador Hahn
    Ron Gilbert
    Ron Gilbert
    • Boyfriend
    • (uncredited)
    Burt Richards
    • Cab Driver
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Don Schain
    • Writer
      • Don Schain
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews12

    5.2278
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    10

    Featured reviews

    6DarylJGittings

    The third and final "Ginger" film

    Girls Are for Loving is the final film of the "Ginger" trilogy. It is also the strongest film of the series.

    Once again Ginger is on the case. She and her friend Jason are hired by the FBI for a case. Beautiful redhead Ronnie is the villain this time out in Ginger's toughest assignment yet. Per the usual Ginger uses all of assets to get the job done.

    There's all the sleazy sex and nudity that we've come to expect from a Ginger movie. However, the story and is more fast paced and action packed than the previous two films, "Ginger" and "The Abductors". If you enjoyed both of those films you'll enjoy "Girls Are For Loving" too!
    3movieman_kev

    at LEAST try to stay true to the character

    Third and last in the Ginger trilogy. I watched the first two, so I have to finish the trilogy, that's the way I am for better or worse, in this case the latter. In this one Ginger is cold in to put a stop to ... insider trading?? Yup more or less that's what it is. She also acts WAY out of character by falling in love with a black man. Now there's nothing wrong with that, but when you set her up as absolutely hating blacks in the first one, you stick to the character no matter how despicable. Despite that this has all the ingredients of a Ginger film. S&M, stupid dialog, silly 'action'. It's as bad as the other two.

    Eye Candy: Cherri Caffaro, Jocelyne Peters and an unknown girl all get fully nude

    My Grade: D
    5Uriah43

    The 3rd Film in the "Ginger Trilogy"

    This movie is the 3rd film in the "Ginger Trilogy" after "Ginger" and "The Abductors" respectively. In this particular movie a high-ranking diplomat is kidnapped by a mysterious group who want information pertaining to the "Asian-American Trade Alliance" he was in the process of negotiating. When they discover that he doesn't have the knowledge they want they murder him and then set their sights on a higher level diplomat named "James L. Whitney III" (Scott Ellsworth) who will now assume the responsibility of negotiating the trade pact. Realizing that James Whitney is a potential target the CIA turns to an outside source and recruits "Ginger McAllister" (Cheri Caffaro) to essentially stay with him night and day in order to protect him. But neither the CIA nor Ginger fully fathom just how resourceful their enemy actually is. Now rather than reveal any more of this movie and risk ruining it for those who haven't seen it I will just say that this film had some definite good qualities with the two most noticeable being the presence of Cheri Caffaro and Jocelyn Peters (as "Ronnie St. Clair"). Unfortunately, it also suffered from some of the same weaknesses as the other two movies as well. For example, the combat scenes and dialogue were rather clumsy at times and tended to give the movie a Grade-B quality. In short, I thought this movie was essentially on the same level as its predecessors and have rated it accordingly. Average.
    6bbhlthph

    A film that efficiently provides exactly what it offers (and no more)

    This was the third and last of the B movies written and directed by Don Schain, that featured Cheri Caffaro as Ginger, a private investigator whose activities frequently result in her losing her clothing and finding herself in sexually compromising situations - both welcome and unwelcome. It appears to have been the one with the highest budget, and it clearly suffers from the problem that each new film in such a series has to outdo all the previous ones in several important respects if the interest of the viewers is to be maintained. This is a common problem with many film series. It effectively and quite quickly destroyed my interest in the (not dissimilar) James Bond series where more and more exotic, unreal, and unnecessary special effects were felt to be necessary in each new film.. Since the two later Ginger films each attempted to outdo the first one in their exploitation of both sex and violence, it may be as well that there were no more than three of these films. For example, this film opens with a sequence showing raiders attacking a holiday chalet, torching it and murdering the couple on vacation there. This sequence is a perfect example of gratuitous and unnecessary violence -even granting that these events had an important role in the story, they could have been covered more effectively by filming a briefing session for Ginger in which these events were featured only through newspaper, TV or police reports.

    I saw all three of these films soon after they were first released, but until very recently had not seen them since. However when commenting to IMDb on a more recent film of the same genre, I found myself spontaneously commenting that the films in the Ginger series had been much better, so I recently re-watched both this film and "Ginger", the first one in the series, to determine whether this impression was an illusion which would be destroyed if I watched them again. I quickly appreciated that my favorable memories of these films were undoubtedly coloured by the facts both that they broke new ground at the time they were released, and that I was watching them through the eyes of relative youth. However I believe there were other reasons why I did find them less forgettable than the many other films of the same type which I must have seen since, and I have discussed these reasons in the comments I am simultaneously submitting to IMDb on the film "Ginger". Here I would like to comment primarily on some other aspects of these films.

    When these films first appeared, Cheri Caffaro a native of Miami was widely referred to as a Brigitte Bardot look alike; and, as she showed more acting ability than most of the stars of the B movies of the period (admittedly not much acting is required in this class of film), there were suggestions that she might well be able to move on to mainstream Hollywood parts. She did in fact act in several films other than the Ginger films, but these were all typical B movies as the Hollywood system at the time created a barrier between the studios producing B movies and those producing mainstream films which was almost impossible to penetrate. (Even Marilyn Monroe, after succeeding in mainstream films, encountered major problems when it was revealed that she had previously posed for figure studies for a still photographer.) This rather rigid distinction stopped most attempts to produce B movies with any real artistic qualities, and the Ginger films were all straight sexploitation movies. Their audience was primarily young couples visiting drive-in cinemas or attending the late night showings at conventional movie houses, and the main attraction for the woman was watching a private investigator who could put both male colleagues and adversaries in their place, whilst that for the man was nudity and more nudity. (After all, he had done the right thing by taking his girl to the cinema, otherwise he could have been in the local bar with his pals watching the strippers!) Clearly the stars of such films had to be prepared to deliver, and there is no point in criticising their roles on this score. Nevertheless the men in the audiences also usually expected some measure of violence, as well as threatened violence when one of the "good guys or girls" was captured by the gang. As my comments about the opening sequence of this film indicated, I am old fashioned enough to believe that such violence should be limited to circumstances where it is a necessary part of the story line. But not everyone would agree with me so perhaps this is also not a valid criticism.

    However in this film Ginger showed quickly that she was a threat to the conspirators and, with the example of the first sequence in mind, it seems clear that she should have been a target for immediate elimination by them if she was captured. Instead when this occurred her captors amused themselves by trying to excite her sexually. This is the sort of highly improbable incident that certainly fits in with the theme of the movie but does not fit with the basic story line. Such concerns must affect the evaluation of a movie by a critic, but do not usually have much influence on its acceptability to its intended audience. After considering all such issues, I am left in the position where I feel that this was a well made movie of its kind, and was much better than many of its later imitations. It deserves a reasonable rating based on this assessment, but it could never receive the type of high rating one might give to a film which attempts to leave its viewers with a significant message or conclusion to think about. Six out of ten.
    4dinky-4

    More "brainless" than "topless"

    It's hard to decide which is more disturbing. That the makers of this movie actually thought viewers could be tricked into believing leading lady Cheri Caffero is beautiful, glamorous, and sophisticated, or that they actually believed it themselves. One doesn't know whether to cringe or laugh at the results.

    Surprisingly, the movie does have a bright spot of sorts. The movie begins when a "fourth assistant undersecretary" named "Steve" is stripped and kidnapped with his girlfriend from an A-frame house. The girlfriend is promptly shot dead but Steve is beat-up, questioned, and eventually executed by the evil Ms. St. Clair. The actor playing "Steve" is H-O-T yet he's not even listed in the movie's end credits. Who is this guy?

    The worst scene? So many choices, but the prize must go to Cheri Caffero's nightclub number when -- swathed in a cocoon of blue feathers -- she tries to sing and look sexy at the same time.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Quotes

      Ginger McAllister: I don't mind giving my bod to him, in the name of the flag of course.

      Jason Varone: But why?

      Ginger McAllister: Let's just say I like to fuck a lot.

    • Connections
      Featured in Dusk to Dawn Drive-in Trash-o-Rama Show Vol. 7 (2002)
    • Soundtracks
      All the Things You Dream
      Lyrics by R. Kent Evans Music by Robert G. Orpin

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    FAQ16

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • May 25, 1973 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Die kühle Blonde mit der heißen Masche
    • Filming locations
      • St. Thomas, U.S. Virgin Islands
    • Production company
      • Derio
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Gross US & Canada
      • $87,089
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      1 hour 35 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Mono

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