The Filthiest Show in Town (film)

The Filthiest Show in Town is a 1973 satirical exploitation comedy film directed by Richard Endelson and Robert A. Endelson. It stars Sandra Peabody, Tina Russell, and Harry Reems.[1] The story follows the owners of the National Genital Television Network who go on trial over backlash of one of their highest rated shows: the adult dating show entitled The Maiden Game. The story follows several other vignettes in the form of disjointed commercial segments. Initially, the film was promoted by the extensive media coverage of adult film stars Russell and Reems, the latter having just starred in the mainstream adult film Deep Throat (1972). Subsequently, it was promoted by the notability of Peabody who had just starred in Wes Craven's critically acclaimed horror film The Last House on the Left (1972).

Filthiest Show in Town
Theatrical release poster
Directed byRichard Endelson
Robert A. Endelson
Written byRichard Endelson
StarringSandra Peabody
Tina Russell
Harry Reems
Release date
  • March 1, 1973 (1973-03-01)
Running time
74 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish

Cast

edit

Reception

edit

The film was met with generally negative reviews. In a 1974 review for The Province, film critic Michael Walsh stated, "A first film for a pair of would-be film entrepreneurs, New York's Endelson brothers, its only interesting feature is the fact that a number of American hardcore film veterans - performers like Tina Russel, Harry Reems and Dolly Sharp - appear in some mind-numbing, non-gymnastic roles. The filthiest show is The Maiden Game, afternoon entertainment from the National Genital Television network. A parody of TV's The Dating Game, it features nude "studs" and "maidens." Participants have names like Phyllis Phallus and come from places like Condom, Connecticut. The film actually does achieve the level of a poorly produced TV game show. In other words, it has absolutely nothing to recommend it."[2]

References

edit
  1. ^ "Filthiest Show in Town". The Video Vacuum. Retrieved April 11, 2016.
  2. ^ Walsh, Michael (September 11, 1974). "Ski flick is bad but other is worse". The Province. Retrieved April 23, 2019.
edit