Nymphos!!!


I'm sorry but I was just watching this movie. Peter Breck left the room with 'the dixie guy' (james best) dancing with a girl and walked into the adjoining room. There was about 6 fairly good looking women in the room staring at him with desire and one of them was singing 'My Bonnie lies over the Ocean'. Breck looks at each one, sizes up the situation and his 'conscience' loudly states: NYMPHO'S!!! It just cracked me up for some reason. Until the nympho's attacked him it didn't look like that bad of a situation to be in. Unfortunately, they were 'Psycho- Nympho's!' The worst kind of Nympho!

You're damned if you do and damned if you don't ~ Bart Simpson

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A role tailor-made for Angelina Jolie... as a person, not an actor! HAHA! But I'm *sure* she could pull it off as an actor, too. :-p

This movie had too much filler w/ the useless "strip" number, then later w/ the opera singing. Yes, I realize if one WAS in a mental institution, they'd be have to be subjected to this annoyance in real-time, but that doesn't mean the audience does. Kind of lazy film making?

This movie's CORE premise makes you suspend belief. He's a journalist, w/ a high IQ and they KNOW they're housing a murderer and they let him in anyway?

http://www.mgmbill.org/ Help protect boys rights, too!

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Classic scene. Bump!

Bandages on his face from being kissed too hard, lol.

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How many murder mysteries that took place on trains always had the "Train going down the tracks" filler? MANY!!

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Yeah, that was funny. When it came out, the movie was marketed as an exploitation B-movie (like other Fuller movies) using a tagline that he was locked in an asylum with beautiful nymphos. This actually could have been a decent movie in the right hands, kind of like Shutter Island

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That single line and delivery is seriously one of the most memorable moments in the movie.

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ITA! I burst out laughing. Love the way Breck said it - he was so serious and sounded almost scared.

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Hilarious.

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That whole scene made me laugh - especially when they started to attack him, for some reason.

Unfortunately, they were 'Psycho- Nympho's! The worst kind of Nympho!
Yeah, most of them were indeed very good looking ladies, but you wouldn't want to be surrounded by them. I'd probably take my chances, though.



Hey there, Johnny Boy, I hope you fry!

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That scene is indeed crazy, but I will add that he's trying to stay "in character" as a guy who's completely obsessed with his sister. So that probably causes him to reject the nymphos initially and then of course things get out of hand.

Kind of the reverse of when he pushes the girlfriend away in the visiting room; he partly doesn't want her to blow his cover but he's also probably disappearing into his false personality. Though it was surprising to me that she doesn't realize in retrospect that she was endangering him.

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That scene is indeed crazy, but I will add that he's trying to stay "in character" as a guy who's completely obsessed with his sister. So that probably causes him to reject the nymphos initially and then of course things get out of hand.


Except that the shocked and panicky "nymphos!" reaction is not spoken aloud. We only hear Johnny's thoughts at that point, so he's not acting. That's his real reaction. I'm not sure it's meant to have anything to do with his cover story. I think that, hilariously, Fuller is asking us to accept that this is his normal reaction to being approached by a bunch of attractive women. Now, mind you, although they are good-looking, they are also clearly crazy, and he is far outnumbered. If he believes - which, again hilariously, Fuller seems to think the audience believes* - that "nymphos" are insane in a physically dangerous way, then I guess a certain amount of fear is in order. The attack itself, as others have said, is just crazy, illogical fun. What they hell are they doing to him? Biting? Sucking on his flesh? And yet, despite being crazed nymphomaniacs and despite Peter Breck being a handsome guy, they chastely avoid removing his trousers. ;-)

*I'm a little too young to remember the common attitude toward hypersexual women in 1963, but I'm pretty sure people didn't think they were violently insane. Disturbed, maybe; immoral, certainly; but physically dangerous? It just doesn't fit with the prevailing attitudes toward women and sex at the time. Obviously, Fuller was going purely for the lurid shock value, but you have to wonder if audiences even at the time didn't find it a bit OTT and funny, whether intentionally or otherwise.

Kind of the reverse of when he pushes the girlfriend away in the visiting room; he partly doesn't want her to blow his cover but he's also probably disappearing into his false personality. Though it was surprising to me that she doesn't realize in retrospect that she was endangering him.



Yeah, that was bizarre. Under their cover story, why would she be visiting him at all? Why would the psychiatrist allow it unless it was part of joint therapy sessions? Surely, given his supposed diagnosis, it would be the worst possible thing for Johnny to have unsupervised time with his "sister", especially since she displays every sign of reciprocating his "incestuous" lust.

I do agree that by that point Johnny is more than halfway to crazy as a loon.

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I wouldn't be a bit surprised if someone doesn't pick up on this (scene) and come up with
a replacement series for 'The Walking Dead'. They looked exactly like back from the dead attackers 'feasting' on flesh, no ? Hey, I think I might be onto something here ...

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Lol, I'm watching this movie right now and had the same reaction! I looked at my husband and said ooh just like the zombies on the Walking Dead 😏

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