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The Body Shop

  • 1972
  • X
  • 1h 15m
IMDb RATING
3.7/10
539
YOUR RATING
The Body Shop (1972)
Body HorrorHorrorSci-Fi

Don Brandon, a plastic surgeon and mad scientist, loses his wife Anitra in a tragic accident. He and his assistant Igor experiment with re-animation, using hypnosis to create a new Anitra.Don Brandon, a plastic surgeon and mad scientist, loses his wife Anitra in a tragic accident. He and his assistant Igor experiment with re-animation, using hypnosis to create a new Anitra.Don Brandon, a plastic surgeon and mad scientist, loses his wife Anitra in a tragic accident. He and his assistant Igor experiment with re-animation, using hypnosis to create a new Anitra.

  • Director
    • J.G. Patterson Jr.
  • Writer
    • J.G. Patterson Jr.
  • Stars
    • J.G. Patterson Jr.
    • Jenny Driggers
    • Roy Mehaffey
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    3.7/10
    539
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • J.G. Patterson Jr.
    • Writer
      • J.G. Patterson Jr.
    • Stars
      • J.G. Patterson Jr.
      • Jenny Driggers
      • Roy Mehaffey
    • 27User reviews
    • 26Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos43

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    Top Cast25

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    J.G. Patterson Jr.
    J.G. Patterson Jr.
    • Dr. Brandon
    • (as Don Brandon)
    Jenny Driggers
    • Anitra
    Roy Mehaffey
    • Greg
    Linda Faile
    • Girl in the Trunk
    Jan Benfield
    • Pam
    Jeannine Aber
    • Ellen
    Candy Furr
    • Secretary
    Vickie O'Neal
    • Company Corpse
    Jerry Kearns
    • Old Man in Truck
    Ken Sigmon
    • Max (Truck Driver)
    Linda Lindsey
    • Scrubwoman
    Bill Nevins
    • Bartender
    Joe B. Lamb
    • Self
    Chris Allen
    • Guard
    Howard Stewart
    • Harry
    Reggie Belk
    • Jack
    Vince Carmen
    Judy Calloway
    • Director
      • J.G. Patterson Jr.
    • Writer
      • J.G. Patterson Jr.
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews27

    3.7539
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    Featured reviews

    horrorbargainbin

    Funny, and touching if you are in a weird mood

    Towards the 2nd half of the film we see the good doctor in love with his creation. I was feeling quite torn about a girl at the time and could almost understand why the doctor felt such strung emotions. Sure, perhaps he goes to far when he puts a cleaver through Igor's hump in a jealous rage, but that's what he did.

    Yes this movie is gorey and that's the real strong point. Watch this film if you are into amputations and operations that pretty young girls will not survive.
    GordonFly

    One of the best gore films ever made!

    This film breaks no new ground, it's pretty much an updated version of 'Frankenstein'. It concerns a doctor who's wife has died, and he is now determned to create the perfect woman. He goes out to find females he deems to have the perfect parts he needs, hypnotises them, and takes them back to his lab where he proceeds to cut off the desired parts for his jigsaw puzzle with the aid of his hunchbacked assistant.

    I've always loved gore, and films like this are my cup of tea! I don't know about any of you, but gore films with dismemberment are my favorites, and this is one of the best! I'm surprised to hear alot of people say that the gore effects in this film are phony looking, I disagree, they are quite realistic, and I love them for it. I especially love the secretary victim scene, the good doctor, or in this case not so good doctor, proceeds to cut off her arms with a scalpel as she watches, and then good ol Herscall cuts to a close up of her mutilated shoulder.

    I love the technique for showing the severed limbs in the film, most of the time it's just an actress with her hand, or arm, sticking out of a hole cut into the table. Not a new technique to be sure, but it's very effective here.

    I would love to pick this one up, but alas it's all but impossible to track down. Oh well, here's hoping for a dvd release.
    Michael_Elliott

    Low Budget Drive-In Camp

    The Body Shop (1972)

    ** (out of 4)

    Dr. Brandon (J.G. Patterson, Jr.) loses his beautiful wife so he decides to build another one with the help of his hunchback. Soon the two are kidnapping women and chopping them up for their parts.

    Also known as DOCTOR GORE, this film is pretty much a mixture of FRANKENSTEIN, EYES WITHOUT A FACE and THE AWFUL DR. ORLOFF. This film is best remembered for features some gore but it's doubtful there's enough to keep most people entertained. I think it's best that you don't take this film too serious and just enjoy it's low-budget charm and sometimes gore.

    Director Patterson, Jr., also cast himself in the lead and for the most part his performance is bad yet it's good enough for this type of movie. I thought the best thing that can be said about the film is that whenever it goes for some humor it usually works. I will gladly admit that I found myself laughing several times including the scene where the hunchback needs help getting his lab coat on.

    Again, the film is mainly known for some of its gore but in all honesty there's really not too much here. There's more bloody in those early Herschell Gordon Lewis pictures but there are still some memorable moments here. The film goes on a tad bit too long and there's a long "romance" sequence that really goes on too long. Throw in a weird sequence with a country singer and another weird one with a sheriff and THE BODY SHOP is just campy enough to be slightly entertaining.
    5Witchfinder-General-666

    "Sugar and spice, and everything nice - that's what little girls are made of. But as they get bigger, they take on a figure, and some are much nicer than others..."

    The lines in the title of this review are the first lines in this film's theme song, a wonderfully demented parody of the (in my opinion horrible) song "My favorite things" from "The Sound of Music". And this fun little detail isn't the only aspect that makes "The Body Shop" aka. "Doctor Gore" (1973) recommendable to my fellow Gore/Trash fans. The film, which was created almost entirely by J.G. Patterson Jr., who served as producer, writer, director and leading man as the eponymous Dr. Gore, is crap, no doubt, but it is also beyond doubt that it is amusing, and that everyone involved, probably Patterson especially, was aware that they were not exactly making a masterpiece.

    Dr. Brandon (Patterson) a famous but totally insane plastic surgeon, looses his beloved wife Anitra, a model, in an accident. Along with his hunchbacked assistant Greg (Roy Mehaffey), he henceforth kidnaps beautiful young women in order to build himself a new, perfect wife out of their body-parts...

    "Doctor Gore" is doubtlessly a film of the 'so bad it's good kind', but it is also has qualities beyond the usual ridiculous trashiness. Mad science has always been one of my absolute favorite Horror topics, and, as a matter of fact, it is also one of the coolest topics for ridiculous Gore Trash flicks. Obviously shot on a minimal budget, "Doctor Gore" pays some homage to the "Frankenstein" films, especially James Whale's masterpiece "Bride of Frankenstein" (1935), and resembles the look of the early Troma / Herschell Gordon Lewis Gore flicks such as "Blood Feast" (1963) - only that this looks a lot cheaper and crappier. Obviously J.G. Patterson's motive was not merely to make a fun gore flick: Being a rather ugly, weird-looking fellow, his role of Dr. Brandon gave Patterson the opportunity to make out with a couple of hot, scarcely dressed young women (who would later end up as body-part donors in Dr. Brandon's laboratory).

    Most of the gore is actually pretty well-made regarding the obviously tiny budget. The dialogue includes some extremely hilarious lines ("Get that, it might be the door... and put a coat on so they don't see you're a hunchback."). Besides the aforementioned theme song, "Doctor Gore" also includes a wonderfully crappy appearance by a country band called 'Bill Hicks and the Rainbows' - my new favorite band, NOT. For the rest of the film, I kept wondering whether Bill Hicks and Roy Mehaffey, who plays the hunchbacked assistant, are twins or even the same person - the two look exactly the same, and having two unrelated obese, red-bearded guys looking this weird in one film would be a huge coincidence. Other than J.G. Patterson, most of the cast members never did any other films. This is the first film I've seen out of the few by Patterson. Sadly, the man died of cancer in 1975.

    Overall, "Doctor Gore" is a film that certainly isn't for everyone. As a matter of fact, it is total crap. But it is also amusing, and recommendable to my fellow fans of weirdness and cheap camp stuff. Dictionaries should show a screenshot from this film under 'trash flick'.
    1c-f-eller

    No!! Patterson made yet another movie!! The Electric Chair.

    One of the commenter's is wrong. This is not the only Pat Patterson film and he didn't die two years after this was made. He shot a film called the "Electric Chair" in Pineville, NC. He shot this a few years after Doctor Gore. Patterson died in the late 70's. I know this because he used my house and he left a cat there!! It sucked also. This was a big deal when the movie came out. No independent horror films were being made in NC. This movie didn't help matters. Patterson used to do gore effects for H. G. Lewis. He was also good at magic. His gore scenes in Body shop were actually well done. The film was shot in a building that also housed a 7/11. You can actually see the tops of the walls in some scenes. The budget was less that $20,000 and the script looked like a child wrote it. Only Patterson could understand it. Still...it's entertainment and it's a classic.

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    Related interests

    Jeff Goldblum in The Fly (1986)
    Body Horror
    Mia Farrow in Rosemary's Baby (1968)
    Horror
    James Earl Jones and David Prowse in Star Wars: Episode V - The Empire Strikes Back (1980)
    Sci-Fi

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Roy Mehaffey was the only trained actor on set, yet had no lines in the movie.
    • Goofs
      Near the end of the film, the slate is visible in one shot, indicating that the number of takes filmed for that scene were insufficient and the filmmakers were forced to use the slate shot to pad out the dialogue. If you look close enough, you can see that the working title of the film was "Anitra".
    • Quotes

      Dr. Don Brandon: Hands on a woman are more...most important. It's the delicate feminine hand that brings out the true femininity.

    • Connections
      Featured in Extra Weird (2003)

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    FAQ13

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • June 1972 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Anitra
    • Filming locations
      • Overlook Castle, North Carolina, USA
    • Production companies
      • Metrolina Films
      • Studio 1 Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 15m(75 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Mono

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