Robinson und seine wilden Sklavinnen (1972) Poster

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A Franco Comedy That Needs More Attention
Michael_Elliott10 May 2014
Robinson und seine wilden Sklavinnen (1972)

*** (out of 4)

Druggist Robinson Smith (Yejuda Barkan) is pretty much bored his with job, tired of his mother-in-law and also can't stand his wife not getting him any so he imagines a beautiful island with beautiful women who will give him what he wants. The only problem is that once he's really on this island with beautiful women, he never expected to run into wild savages. As with many of director Jess Franco's works, I had to view this without the benefit of subtitles so as much as I did enjoy the film, I probably would have enjoyed it twice as much had I been able to follow everything going on. This is obviously your typical sex comedy that you'd expect to see during this part of the decade and Robinson Crusoe is the target. I was really shocked to see how funny and well-made this picture was and it just goes to show you that Franco was more than capable of doing more than just porn or sleazy trash. For starters, the film actually looks extremely professional and this includes some very good cinematography and even the editing was a lot more impressive than what we normally see. The comic timing by the director is probably the best I've seen from him. Most people point to CELESTINE AN ALL AROUND MAID as his best comedy but I found this one to be so much better. The performance by Barkan was extremely good and his laid-back nature really helped sell the film. His comic timing was also terrific and just look at a scene where he's trying to mess around with the wife in bed and she has face cream on. The supporting cast includes some very beautiful women as well as Franco regulars like Paul Muller and Howard Vernon. At just 80-minutes the film does start to lose some of its steam towards the end but there's no question that fans of the director's work will want to check this one out.
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2/10
Connecting
BandSAboutMovies6 February 2023
Warning: Spoilers
Mr. Robinson (I just had a mental breakdown because I reconized Yehuda Barkan, the Israeli-born comedian and director of a Cannon film that never came to America, The Big Tease, is in the movie!) is tired of the married life with kids. He thinks that he's a descendent of that book character and not just a simple phamarcist and ends up on a jungle island with three women: Samantha (Anne Libert, The Queen of the Night, not to quote Dio, but from A Virgin Among the Living Dead), Linda (oh man, my world's collide again because that's Andrea Rau, Ilona from Daughters of Darkness!) and Peper (Ingeborg Steinbach from the Schoolgirl Report movies and if you read that and paused and say, "Ah yes, Schoolgirl Report, you're a pervert." and then we will laughing with one another and not at like old friends should). He gets there, because this is a Jess Franco movie, thanks to a rich porn star jewel thief which is like, being President of the Jess Franco Cinematic Universe (also, friend, if you thought, "Oh yes, the JFCU." thank you, I am writing this while high and maybe we are speaking through time, who can say, other than this 10mg of hard THC candy that just kicked in).

There's also a talking chimp, Howard Vernon as a comical cannibal, a Franco cameo as a director, a triggering ending where the mean wife comes to the island and discovers what Trent Renzor really meant about "Happiness In Slavery," a script by Ken Globus (another Cannon connection, he did second unit on Menahem's Operation Thunderbolt and the pre-Golan and Globus Cannon release The Passover Plot and man, writing this movie is like Jim Garrison level connections because he also wrote the English language translations for the Lemon Popsicle sequel Going Steady) and Artur Brauner (who produced tons of Franco's films and also wrote...man, make it stop! He wrote Cannon's The Rose Garden, as well as Death Occurred Last Night, The Vengeance of Doctor Mabuse and X312: Flight to Hell).

Really, this movie kind of blew my mind. Thanks for reading and being there.

Oh yeah and it's really not good. It's not set in a real jungle, everything is very lad's mag humor and Jess feels just there for it. But whatever. I'm still glad it exists.
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7/10
Jess Robinson.
morrison-dylan-fan31 May 2019
Warning: Spoilers
Originally planning to view a disc I've been meaning to play for ages,I got some free viewing time earlier than expected. Having looked forward to opening Stephen Thrower's incredible first book on the work of film maker "Uncle" Jess Franco the moment a "Best of 1972" poll appeared on ICM,I sailed off for a new Jess viewing.

View on the film:

Made at the time when German Sex Comedies were joining the countless genres he took on, directing auteur Jess Franco sends his Robinson Crusoe to a jungle covered with the vines of a Sit-Com atmosphere, as Uncle Jess plays his distinctive trombone zoom-ins across the leafy Portugal location brushing against the leaves,and the smoking hot fit ladies joining Robinson on the island. Backed by a rattling jungle score from regular composer Daniel White, Jess & cinematographer Gerard Brisseau (their first of several team-ups) take great delight in their free-flowing Sit-Com surroundings,which allows them to throw in funny talking animals (!) and a slap-stick fight for Robinson to prove himself to be the god of the jungle.

Featuring a cameo by Uncle Jess as a abusive film director who causes Robinson to save a woman called "Linda", the screenplay by regular collaborator Artur Brauner, (born in 1918,still alive and working!) and newcomer to the Jess world Ken Globus take great delight in following Jess's groove in taking Sit-Com staples to the jungle,as Robinson struggles to leave his libido feeling satisfied, whilst fearing his nagging wife reaching the island!

Although it does not press too heavy on a "message", the final image the Uncle Jess and the writers knit is one where Robinson can't escape his responsibilities by running off into his own fantasy. Joining Yehuda Barkan's merry take on Robinson, Andrea Rau and regular Jess duo Anne Libert and Ingeborg Steinbach give playfully sexy turns as fellow jungle guests Linda, Samantha and Peper,with each of them fanning the frustration of Robinson being the only man in Uncle Jess's jungle.
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8/10
nice little Franco comedy, with some nudity, and more ...
FrancoisXavier3 May 2003
Poor old Robinson who is boring at home with a terrible mother-in-law and an annoying housewife, and at work too. One day, he decides to retire from urban life with 3 very nice girls on an island. But beware of the awful cannibals !!!!

This is one of my favorite Franco flicks, very interesting to watch, with some smooth moments and little almost hardcore ones (in the party when people are watching a film where some people having sex, with a superb organ music, an highlight to this movie).

French starlet Anne Libert is playing one of the nude girl on the Robinson Island (she was in a lot of Franco movies at this time), and Howard Vernon is playing a not so very frightening cannibal, saying word like "Agagagag" & "hououou".

A very pleasant moment.
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