Big Bad Mama Movie Review
Big Bad Mama Review
"Big Bad Mama" Overview

Rating: R
1974
Cast and Crew
Director : Steve CarverProducer : Roger Corman
Screenwiter : William W. Norton,Frances Doel
Starring : Angie Dickinson,William Shatner,Tom Skerritt,Susan Sennett,Robbie Lee,Noble Willingham,Dick Miller
William Shatner and Tom Skerritt would probably rather you forget about the
infamous Big Bad Mama, one of the best-known exploitation films ever made.
Thanks begin with Shatner and Skerritt, both starring as pervy hangers-on to
the film's star -- and the reason why Mama is so widely seen -- Angie
Dickinson, a 43-year-old bombshell who turns to crime in order to keep her two
trollop daughters clothed. Barely.
Using Bonnie & Clyde as its obvious base, producer Roger Corman and director
Steve Carver add in a second Clyde, plus a little extra skin in the form of two
teenage daughters who always seem to be falling out of their slips. Holding
this clan together is Wilma McClatchie (Dickinson), who almost accidentally
launches on a career of crime -- robbery, bank heists, and kidnapping, with an
unknown goal in sight.
It goes without saying that the plot and dialogue are neither very fleshy,
serving as a method for connecting action sequences and love scenes (with just
about every possible boy-girl pair of the five players being realized by the
end) -- and let me tell you, you haven't lived until you've witnessed William
Shatner sweating over Dickinson's naked body.
Mama is a sight better than most of its cheapie brethren, though, because
Corman somehow convinced real actors to appear in the movie. These guys really
do give it their all, almost oblivious to the schlock they're appearing in,
which really camps up the production in ways you can't quite explain. Shatner
alone is already starting at a super-camp level. To see him vamping in a white
suit in Big Bad Mama is simply classic.
The new DVD includes a commentary track and retrospective about the film. (Rest
assured, Skerritt and Shatner are no-shows.)
Reviewer: Christopher Null



