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The Naked Zoo

1970

R

1 h 25 m

États-Unis

Drame

Une matrone séduisante vit à Miami avec son riche mari en fauteuil roulant. Frustrée, elle couche avec un jeune auteur. Le train de sauce déraille brusquement lorsque son mari le découvre et un meurtre s'ensuit.
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4.0 /10

393 people rated

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Meilleurs acteurs(17)
starring avatar
Rita Hayworth
Helen Golden
starring avatar
Steve Oliver
Terry Shaw
starring avatar
Canned Heat
Themselves
starring avatar
Fay Spain
Pauline
starring avatar
Ford Rainey
Harry Golden
default avatar
Willie Pastrano
Henry
default avatar
Fleurette Carter
Nadine
default avatar
Kim Bretton
Sumi
default avatar
Gwen Merrill
Gee
default avatar
Gertrude Marx
Eloise
starring avatar
John Vella
Boyfriend
starring avatar
Jeff Gillen
Oscar
default avatar
Anne Gilliam
Alice
default avatar
Lynne Topping
Jackie Golden
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George Brooks
Young Boy
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Luis Carvajal
Store Manager
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Bill Kelly
Policeman

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FAQUIR-ALY

29/05/2023 12:35
source: The Naked Zoo
author avatar

its.Kyara.bxtchs

23/05/2023 05:14
This William Grefe production is surprisingly an entertaining film. One of Rita Hayworth's final films, it's a story of double dealings, murder, and suspense. Hayworth, at 52, looks as attractive as ever. She always kept herself in great shape. Sort of sad to see this once great star reduced to this "B" South Florida made movie, but she gives an above average performance; considering the script and budget, that's pretty darn good. Grefe fills his supporting cast with his group of favorites; singer/actor/record producer Steve Alaimo, and former light-heavyweight boxing champ Willie Pastrano. The show however is "stolen" by the acting talents of "cult" acting legend Joe. "Ooh! Ooh!" E. Ross. And there's even t.v.'s Peyton Place regular Stephen Oliver(he played Lee Weber 1966-68 on the hit show)in his best on-screen role. A must-see for fans of Rita Hayworth. I'd rate this film a 9 out of 10.
author avatar

WarutthaIm

23/05/2023 05:14
Rita Hayworth spent the last few years of her life not knowing who she was anymore, painting when she did, and mostly staring out her window at Central Park. She died with many people thinking that alcoholism had robbed her of her career when the truth was Alzheimer's had impacted her final years and back then, the world didn't understand that disease at all. Before she slipped away, she made a movie with William Gréfe, which blows my mind, and that movie is 1970's The Naked Zoo, which was originally called The Grove, named for Coconut Grove, a former artist's colony in Miami. So how did Gréfe - the maker of movies like Sting of Death and Whiskey Mountain - get a big star like Hayworth into a movie made for just $250,000? Well, her agent originally wanted all of that cash, but they were able to make a deal for $50,000 for two weeks of shooting. Her parts were shot in a deserted house near the Pirate's World theme park (of my dreams, as well as movies like Santa and the Ice Cream Bunny and Musical Mutiny). Once known as "The Great American Love Goddess," Hayworth's life was filled with men who wanted her to be the seductive woman she was in films only to learn that she was a real person. Or, perhaps even worse, men who only sought to control her, like first husband Edward Charles Judson, a twice her age businessman who remade her into a sex symbol that he could buy and sell to Hollywood. Her marriages to Orson Welles, Prince Aly Khan, Dick Haymes and James Hill were also marked with mental and physical abuse, with only Welles not outright beating and humiliating her in public*. By 1972 - two years after this film - her health and mental state was so bad that she had to read her lines one at a time while making The Wrath of God. She was to be in Tales That Witness Madness, but left the set before she appearing in one scene. Back to Willian Gréfe. He had hoped to make a movie closer to The Graduate, but you know, as seen through the Florida drive-in movie haze of sex, drugs and crime. And still, this was edited by its distributor, with cuts made to add a * scene and the band Canned Heat playing at a party. Those scenes were filmed by Barry Mahon, pretty much making this movie a team-up of Florida's two top exploitation experts. The film itself concerns Hayworth playing Mrs. Golden, a rich woman who lives with her cuckolder, wheelchair-bound husband Harry (Ford Rainey, Dr. Mixter from Halloween II!). She sleeps with an author named Terry Shaw (Steve Oliver from Peyton Place) and when her husband finds out - and tries to gun them down - Terry stops him, but despite the death of the old man being in self-defense, Mrs. Golden starts blackmailing him. That's really the whole story, although there's also plenty of party scenes and romance between Terry and Nadine (Fleurette Carter, who was also in The Hookers) and Pauline (Fay Spain, Dragstrip Girl). *Welles would say, a day before her death, that she was "one of the dearest and sweetest women that ever lived.
author avatar

zozo gnoutou

23/05/2023 05:14
Really terrible film with a loathsome main character, horrible acting from everyone but Rita, hideous photography and costuming. Poor Rita, in her last substantial part-thank goodness it wasn't her last credit, at least is spared the indignity of having to act with the group of no talents assembled for the picture. All her scenes seem to have been filmed in a different location and the only other actor she has any interaction with is lead actor, Steven Oliver. The only other minor point of interest, and it's slight, is the appearance in one of the party scenes of the 60's band Canned Heat. They aren't bad nor are they very memorable but at least they have some talent which is more than can be said for 95% of the cast. If it's not the bottom of the barrel it's awfully close.
author avatar

Mercy Eke

13/03/2023 12:08
source: The Naked Zoo
author avatar

Andrea Brillantes

13/03/2023 12:08
Really terrible film with a loathsome main character, horrible acting from everyone but Rita, hideous photography and costuming. Poor Rita, in her last substantial part-thank goodness it wasn't her last credit, at least is spared the indignity of having to act with the group of no talents assembled for the picture. All her scenes seem to have been filmed in a different location and the only other actor she has any interaction with is lead actor, Steven Oliver. The only other minor point of interest, and it's slight, is the appearance in one of the party scenes of the 60's band Canned Heat. They aren't bad nor are they very memorable but at least they have some talent which is more than can be said for 95% of the cast. If it's not the bottom of the barrel it's awfully close.
author avatar

Hanna 21

13/03/2023 12:08
Rita Hayworth spent the last few years of her life not knowing who she was anymore, painting when she did, and mostly staring out her window at Central Park. She died with many people thinking that alcoholism had robbed her of her career when the truth was Alzheimer's had impacted her final years and back then, the world didn't understand that disease at all. Before she slipped away, she made a movie with William Gréfe, which blows my mind, and that movie is 1970's The Naked Zoo, which was originally called The Grove, named for Coconut Grove, a former artist's colony in Miami. So how did Gréfe - the maker of movies like Sting of Death and Whiskey Mountain - get a big star like Hayworth into a movie made for just $250,000? Well, her agent originally wanted all of that cash, but they were able to make a deal for $50,000 for two weeks of shooting. Her parts were shot in a deserted house near the Pirate's World theme park (of my dreams, as well as movies like Santa and the Ice Cream Bunny and Musical Mutiny). Once known as "The Great American Love Goddess," Hayworth's life was filled with men who wanted her to be the seductive woman she was in films only to learn that she was a real person. Or, perhaps even worse, men who only sought to control her, like first husband Edward Charles Judson, a twice her age businessman who remade her into a sex symbol that he could buy and sell to Hollywood. Her marriages to Orson Welles, Prince Aly Khan, Dick Haymes and James Hill were also marked with mental and physical abuse, with only Welles not outright beating and humiliating her in public*. By 1972 - two years after this film - her health and mental state was so bad that she had to read her lines one at a time while making The Wrath of God. She was to be in Tales That Witness Madness, but left the set before she appearing in one scene. Back to Willian Gréfe. He had hoped to make a movie closer to The Graduate, but you know, as seen through the Florida drive-in movie haze of sex, drugs and crime. And still, this was edited by its distributor, with cuts made to add a * scene and the band Canned Heat playing at a party. Those scenes were filmed by Barry Mahon, pretty much making this movie a team-up of Florida's two top exploitation experts. The film itself concerns Hayworth playing Mrs. Golden, a rich woman who lives with her cuckolder, wheelchair-bound husband Harry (Ford Rainey, Dr. Mixter from Halloween II!). She sleeps with an author named Terry Shaw (Steve Oliver from Peyton Place) and when her husband finds out - and tries to gun them down - Terry stops him, but despite the death of the old man being in self-defense, Mrs. Golden starts blackmailing him. That's really the whole story, although there's also plenty of party scenes and romance between Terry and Nadine (Fleurette Carter, who was also in The Hookers) and Pauline (Fay Spain, Dragstrip Girl). *Welles would say, a day before her death, that she was "one of the dearest and sweetest women that ever lived.
author avatar

Kuhsher Rose Aadya

13/03/2023 12:08
This William Grefe production is surprisingly an entertaining film. One of Rita Hayworth's final films, it's a story of double dealings, murder, and suspense. Hayworth, at 52, looks as attractive as ever. She always kept herself in great shape. Sort of sad to see this once great star reduced to this "B" South Florida made movie, but she gives an above average performance; considering the script and budget, that's pretty darn good. Grefe fills his supporting cast with his group of favorites; singer/actor/record producer Steve Alaimo, and former light-heavyweight boxing champ Willie Pastrano. The show however is "stolen" by the acting talents of "cult" acting legend Joe. "Ooh! Ooh!" E. Ross. And there's even t.v.'s Peyton Place regular Stephen Oliver(he played Lee Weber 1966-68 on the hit show)in his best on-screen role. A must-see for fans of Rita Hayworth. I'd rate this film a 9 out of 10.
author avatar

The Gallery

16/11/2022 08:32
The Naked Zoo
author avatar

Barbi Sermy

16/11/2022 02:58
This William Grefe production is surprisingly an entertaining film. One of Rita Hayworth's final films, it's a story of double dealings, murder, and suspense. Hayworth, at 52, looks as attractive as ever. She always kept herself in great shape. Sort of sad to see this once great star reduced to this "B" South Florida made movie, but she gives an above average performance; considering the script and budget, that's pretty darn good. Grefe fills his supporting cast with his group of favorites; singer/actor/record producer Steve Alaimo, and former light-heavyweight boxing champ Willie Pastrano. The show however is "stolen" by the acting talents of "cult" acting legend Joe. "Ooh! Ooh!" E. Ross. And there's even t.v.'s Peyton Place regular Stephen Oliver(he played Lee Weber 1966-68 on the hit show)in his best on-screen role. A must-see for fans of Rita Hayworth. I'd rate this film a 9 out of 10.
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