He leaves Debbie downstairs and tells her he has to attend to a sick dog upstairs. When he gets there, there's already a naked broad waiting for him in his bed. He even talks Debbie into going home with him. Despite the fact that he's a cadaverous 70 year old, the stews are quite taken with him. He is saved by retired soldier Brewster (40's cowboy star Robert Livingston), a smooth-talking ladies' man/rich old bastard. Or maybe he's choking, it's never all that clear. Later, during a bumpy flight, some dude starts having an allergic reaction to something. And then, presumably because it was cheap to film, the stews go traipsing around the Las Vegas strip, gawking at the neon and occasionally tugging at a slot machine. Debbie calms down, and the girls resume frolicking through the friendly skies. Margie talks her off the ledge, however, and the two begin to bond. This proves all too much for small-town Debbie, who is quite unsure whether she wants to be part of this permissive new lifestyle. In fact, they throw an anything-goes bash for Jane's birthday just a couple days after Debbie arrives, complete with a live penis-cake for raunchy Jane. Her new roomies - Jane ( Sydney Jordan), Barbara ( Marilyn Joi, Ilsa Harem Keeper of the Oil Shieks), and Margie ( Donna Young, Fugitive Girls) - are all free-spirits prone to mile-high club antics and sexy, extravagant house parties.
She nabs a decent gig as a stewardess, and even ends up rooming with a whole house full of them. Not surprisingly, he reportedly hated it.ĭebbie ( Connie Hoffman) is a golden-haired starchild from Nowheresville, headed to Los Angeles to discover herself. In fact, it remains one of Adamson's most consistently watchable films, and may be his strongest directorial effort, next to 1969's notorious Satans's Sadists.
Naughty Stewardesses, on the other hand, still gets the job done.
Blazing is literally painful to watch at this point, even with the benefit of 70's nostalgia-goggles. Both made a bundle at the drive-ins during their initial releases, but they have not aged equally well. Naughty Stewardesses, on the other hand, was a sexploitation/kidnap drama mash-up with a generous dose of nudity and a creaky old cowboy. Blazing was a cringe-worthy 'comedy' full of creaky old vaudeville acts and slapstick gags. Although they shared several cast members, both films were quite different from one another. Together, they produced two waitress-in-the-sky epics in '75: Blazing Stewardesses and The Naughty Stewardesses. Frankenstein (1971) and Brain of Blood (1972) - and his longtime partner in grime, producer Sam Sherman, clearly thought 1975 was the Year of the Stewardess. Starring Connie Hoffman, Marilyn Joi, Donna Young, Sydney Jordanħ0's Z-king Al Adamson - the genius-blunderer behind eyeball searing trash like Dracula VS.