No matter how you may feel about Miss Jameson, she is an absolute rock star on the pole, and sets the stage for the kind of shiny cheesecake we're in for. She has incredible confidence and control of her body, strutting the stage with a presence that both exudes and transcends her porn star status. According to the behind the scenes, she couldn't be sweeter about sharing her sexy secrets--she actually helped the other girls in the cast with their own choreography on the stage.
The handful of side characters that keep the club running serve both as comic relief and occasional antagonists. Unfortunately neither path lands very well, but no worries since we don't see very much of them. There's the slimy owner Ian Essko (Robert Englund); a smooth black DJ as the voice of reason and possibly the only sane person in this universe; a madame who is cartoonishly Russian from her pastel Lycra pants to tales of squeezing vodka from potatoes in the old country; and a Mexican janitor played by a Puerto Rican actor who is forced to caricature being Mexican to the point that it runs screaming past parody straight into blatant racism.
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This is his big monologue. |
The real magic lies backstage in the dressing room. Here we are introduced to our girls, each completely unique in their own shallow way. First there is the previously introduced Kat, the star of Rhino's. When she isn't tearing up the stage, she hangs out in her separate VIP dressing room, reading Nietzche and contemplating her own futile existence. She's an intellectual stripper, man, and Jameson plays it surprisingly well. She is not the hooker with the heart of gold by any stretch; rather she is an enlightened woman living in a dystopia who doesn't have the patience for anyone else's sensitivities. She's never cruel beyond mild cattiness or chilly determination, but she doesn't go out of her way to be nice, either. Her pep talk to the newbie stripper Jessy about what it takes to be a real dancer is blunt but not malicious, and is actually precisely the advice you would hope to hear from a veteran stripper.
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"First lesson: quit your bitching." |
Next is Jeannie, Kat's rival and apparently the least popular stripper at the club, though God knows why since she's got some of the most stunning cleavage I've ever seen. (Maybe it's her penchant for corsets in a house full of nylon bikinis.) Whatever the reason, Jean mostly serves to shoot Kat dirty looks throughout the movie, inevitably leading to a big-breasted showdown.
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Ugh, what a cow. |
The "lesser" strippers are lesser only in that they don't get nearly as much screen time as they probably deserve. Gaia is set up as an empty-headed sweetheart with self-esteem issues that aren't revealed until it's beyond being relevant, while Sox is more memorable for her crush on Kat than anything else. That, and being a fucking Amazon princess.
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Tall girls represent. |
Then there's Lillith (Roxy Saint), my personal favorite of the ensemble in spite of and precisely because she's a ham-fisted cartoon of The Goth Chick. She's got the punky schoolgirl outfit, the cigarette-stained grumbling, the heavy nipple piercings, the spidery eye makeup that would make Helena Bonham Carter blush. She even employs a little silver pistol on a chain into her dance routines because she is
just so hardcore. I fucking adore her. It shouldn't come as a surprise that Roxy Saint is also a punk rock singer, and a few of her songs are stripped to throughout the film, adding a grimy, sexy flavor to some of the gorier dance scenes. Like Sox, she harbors her own admiration for Kat and is the first gleeful converter to the undead.
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SUCH ANGST! |
Somewhere in the middle is Berenge, a lapdancer who is physically incapable of caring about anything. She is set up to be a much bigger character than she actually turns out to be, and in the end, the film really doesn't need her beyond faithfulness to its source material (which I'll get to).
Finally, there's Jessy, who is arguably our central protagonist, but it's hard to tell since this movie doesn't stay focused on any one character for too long. She is a good Christian girl who is hoping to raise money for her grandmother's surgery by stripping. This character could, and should, be dead on arrival, but this otherwise walking cliche has a self-aware earnestness with a just a hint of world-weariness that's endearing. She's an innocent without being an idiot.
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Just a small town girl, living in a zombie world.... |
Unfortunately, she's got a literal ball-and-chain dragging her down--her bumbling boyfriend Davis, who keeps following her around the club and being a general skeeze. One second he's pleading with her not to take her clothes off for strangers, the next he's slinking into the shadows to enjoy the show. Just like a dude
. Even though Davis is just as useless as any of the other men in this picture, he at the very least serves for Jessy to show her strength. When he begs her to not strip, she hears him out but sticks to her conviction. She doesn't even apologize for his hurt feelings. She makes it clear the whole ordeal has nothing to do with him, and that her grandmother's well-being is "more important than staying pure for you." That's a shockingly progressive direction for a goody-two-shoes character in a movie called
Zombie fucking
Strippers.
Back to the plot, such as it is. The infected soldier hangs out at the club, the virus quietly consuming him. When Kat struts out for another dance, he rushes the stage and proceeds to rip her throat out. Everyone looks on in horror, but are surprised to find that Kat recovers from her wound quite quickly. In no time, she's ready to take the stage again, gaping flesh wound and all.
And she fucking KILLS IT.
Jenna Jameson decomposes beautifully over the course of the film, but these initial scenes are just stellar. The virus has turned her into a vicious, tireless beast, her feral dancing becoming both erotic and frightening. With her black eyes and deranged grin, not to mention the blood streaked all over her golden flesh, she is a full-on predator on the hunt for meat. And the fellas can't get enough!
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Fear-rection.
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When the other girls catch wind of the secret to Kat's makeover, they begin converting to zombie-ism for a taste of the power. Kat's posse swiftly overtakes the club's line up, and infected male patrons begin piling up in the basement like rabid dogs. It is up to the remaining survivors to deal with the sexy zombie menace, and if they can't reason with them, they'll have to shoot their way out. Typical silly splatterfest ensues, with a few sets of glitter tits to spare.
Believe it or not,
Zombie Strippers is based on what some people would call art. Back in 1960's France, a fella named Eugene Ionesco wrote a little farce called
Rhinoceros at the height of the absurdist movement in theater. The play tells the story of a man named Berenger, an everyman who prefers to drown his first-world sorrows and spin philosophy at the local tavern rather than face any real responsibility in life. One day, his musings are interrupted by a passing rhinoceros, which is later rumored to have formerly been a person. Over time, more people in town mysteriously transform into rhinos, rampaging through the streets and destroying property. The remaining non-rhinos try to rationalize the bizarre events and attempt to figure out a cause, but one by one they surrender their humanity to become something else.
Soon the town is lousy with rhinos, all except Berenger and his lady love, Daisy. The two decide to make the best of things and try to go about remaining human despite being surrounded by dangerous animals that were once their neighbors. Over time, the transition to rhino-hood becomes more and more attractive to Daisy, and she eventually leaves to join the herd. Berenger struggles to hold on to his humanity, finding himself seduced by the call of the rhino as well. In the end, he decides to resist temptation and actively fight against the rhino invasion.
The play has a few themes floating around, but the most central is the notion of conformity. Ionesco presents us with normal people who inexplicably become beasts, and the remaining humans willingly follow them--not all at once, but slowly. Through conversation and persistent rationalization, they convince themselves that making the change is simply better than remaining what they are, as if it's a new level of enlightenment, a superior state of being. The play speaks directly to the insidious nature of Nazi propaganda, but could just as easily be applied to any number of hostile movements throughout history--the Salem witch trials, the Satanic Panic of the 1980's, even now with the marketing of our most recent election--a hideous idea that presents itself as profound logic, taking root in the impressionable individual and gradually creeping into public consciousness as the status quo. Berenger represents man's resistance to savage herd mentality, and he ultimately finds direction by pointing away from everyone else.
In these modern times, zombies are an ideal replacement for rhinos. Since Romero's triumphant premiere, they have always represented our most base selves, stripped of empathy and reason, hungry for domination (and flesh).
Zombie Strippers takes this and cranks it up to maximum parody levels, but the themes remain the same. You could even dig a little feminist message out of the fact that the base male is a mindless drone whereas females can retain their speech
and get bitchy superpowers.
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Wanna lapdance? |
Personally, in 2018, the zombie theme is largely played out, and by now even the most inventive twist still often rings a bit stale (with a few choice exceptions). But sometimes art doesn't strike at the right moment and takes a few years for anyone to recognize it for what it is. I believe
Zombie Strippers is ripe for a comeback, not only for its timely political unrest, but also for its feminist themes, however flimsy they may be in context. For me, I always enjoy an ensemble of beauties taking on their shitty situation, so
Zombie Strippers fills a void for me in the same way that
Showgirls does, even if the amazing quality and vibrancy of their female cast doesn't get near as much screen time.
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