Trucker's Woman | |
---|---|
Directed by | Will Zens |
Written by | Joseph A. Alvarez W. Henry Smith |
Produced by | W. Henry Smith |
Starring | Michael Hawkins Mary Cannon Peggy Linville Phil Smoot Doodles Weaver |
Cinematography | Darrell Cathcart |
Music by | Bobby Atkins Charles Jeffords Jackie Jeffords Wayne Jeffords Dan Knight Allan M. Miller Jerry Shinn W. Henry Smith |
Distributed by | Preacherman Corporation Super Pix |
Release date |
|
Running time | 81 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Trucker's Woman (also released as Truckin' Man) is a 1975 action film directed by Will Zens and starring Michael Hawkins. [1]
The film centers around a middle-aged man who drops out of college to go undercover as a truck driver in order to solve the mysterious murder of his trucker father. [2] [3]
The film was shot over three weeks in November 1974 in Florence and Society Hill, South Carolina.
The film was originally called Truckin' Man, and was screened under that title for the first six months of its theatrical release (appearing on a double bill with Hot Summer in Barefoot County ). The distributor felt that changing it to Trucker's Woman would result in higher box office returns.
One of the home media distributors was Troma Entertainment, in 1983 on videocassette. The cover of this release (below), featured new photography of models not resembling the actual actors in the film. [4]
In 2018, the film was subject to a comedic running commentary by RiffTrax's Mike Nelson, Kevin Murphy and Bill Corbett. [5] [6]
Trucker's Woman also contains a mysterious, random image of a pepperoni pizza lying on a wooden deck that appears for a single frame in the middle of a brake line checking scene, at 1:08:38 (or 1:00:51 in the RiffTrax version, which, based on the shorter runtime and lack of R-rated material, seems to be based on a television edit [5] ). Due to the vignetting effect which was applied to it, it appears that the insertion of this frame was not accidental, but rather was an attempt to subliminally influence audiences to buy pizza (e.g. from drive-in theater concession stands). [7]
The Toxic Avenger is a 1984 American superhero black comedy splatter film produced and directed by Michael Herz and Lloyd Kaufman from a screenplay by Joe Ritter, based on a story by Kaufman. The film was produced and released by Troma Entertainment. It is the first installment in The Toxic Avenger film series and generated a media franchise.
Troma Entertainment is an American independent film production and distribution company founded by Lloyd Kaufman and Michael Herz in 1974. The company produces low-budget independent films, or "B movies", primarily of the horror comedy genre, all geared exclusively to mature audiences. Many of them play on 1950s horror with elements of farce, parody, gore, and splatter.
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