Bonnie's Kids (1972)
9/10
An Unknown Classic
20 July 2021
Some B-Movies are so bad they're good, some are so cheesy they're good, while others push the boundaries of reality to give an over-the-top experience that is enjoyable. This fits in the category of just being a well told story that delivers in every aspect. From the acting to the pace to the set piece all brilliance and would be the pride and joy of any director.

Tiffany Bolling puts in an absolute stellar performance as one of the best characters of all time in Ellie-sexy, seductive, cruel, tough as nails and devious. Along with her sister Myra (Robin Mattson) who are the focus of the local peeping tom community in their small town. After suffering years of abuse from their step-father, Charley played by Leo Gordon in such a small role he instantly becomes one of the most iconic villains of all time. They finally have had enough of the abuse and take the law into their own hands. On the run they find solitude in their uncle's mansion, Ben (Scott Brady) who runs a top shelf magazine and isn't as clean cut as first perceived. With the set-up of a package collection and drop off, the film spirals into a pulpy-crime classic and we are left guessing at every corner. Involving two ruthless smooth gangsters Digger (Timothy Brown) and Eddy (Alex Rocco), a charming private detective Larry (Steve Sandor), an unhappy wife Diana (Lenore Stevens), an annoying salesman Frank (Max Showalter), a handsome buck Harry (Nicholas Cortland) and other characters who all put in a top notch performance. It all culminates to a finale you do not see coming.

With classic cars, exploitation, pure 70's style, great thrilling and suspenseful action this film packs a punch. The acting is spot-on (If there is a weak spot and I'm being harsh, it could be Robin Mattson or Lenore Stevens at times), the music is pure quality and fits every scene to a T, the whole film is perfectly paced and flows smoothly. If you are into grindhouse, B-Movies, gritty-crime, exploitation, Tarantino or the Coen Brothers you should give this entertaining film a watch. It is as cool as ice, as fluid as funk and just one all out joyride.

This could easily be a 10, but I'll have to re-watch this a few times to make sure.

For the fans of Cheese, I think this is one of those rare films that got everything spot on. If there is cheese, I missed it.

Note: Not for the bad movie lovers.
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