Vampire Hookers is a mid-career US/Filipino exploitation film of the Filipino grand
trashmaster Cirio H.
Santiago (18 Jan 1936 – 26 Sept 2008), a man we've looked at in passing in both
R.I.P.: Jim Kelly, Part II (see: Stranglehold and/or Ultimatum [1994 / trailer])
and R.I.P. Dick Miller, Part IV: 1974-76 (see: TNT Jackson [1974 / trailer]), if not
elsewhere on our blog. (For more info on the fecund Filipino exploitation scene
of the 70s & 80s, we suggest the 2010 documentary Machete Maidens Unleashed [trailer below].)
Trailer to
Machete Maidens Unleashed:
Santiago's exploitation movies, this one included, are generally
entertaining examples of terrible direction, bad acting, sloppy post-dubbing,
harsh lighting, cheap effects, topless babes and primitive editing — in other
words, enjoyably fun flotsam.
In the theatres and on the video shop self, Vampire Hookers (aka Vampire
Hookers of Horror) was found under diverse titles, including Ladies of the Night, Night of the Bloodsuckers, Sensuous Vampires, Graveyard Tramps, Twice Bitten and more — currently, as
we write this (18 Jan 21), it can be found on Amazon Prime under its Vampire Playgirls moniker.
Trailer to
Vampire Hookers:
Over at the Science Fiction, Horror and Fantasy Film
Review, which by saying that they "suspect that Vampire Hookers
might have been better off as a comedy" reveal the startling fact that
they didn't even realize that it is supposed
to be a comedy, one finds a quick plot description: "Two US Navy sailors
Tom Buckley (Bruce Fairbairn) and Terry Wayne (Trey Wilson
[21 Jan 1948 – 16 Jan 1989] of Raising
Arizona [1987 / trailer])
are on shore leave in Manila and looking to get laid. Fellow officer Eddie
Taylor (Lex Winter) is set up with Cherish (Karen Stride), a beautiful local
girl he meets in a bar. She takes him back to her place — a mausoleum in the
local cemetery. Waiting there is the aging vampire Richmond Reed* (John Carradine [5 Feb 1906 – 27 Nov
1988] of The Monster Club [1981], Shock Waves [1977], The House of Frankenstein [1944]
and so much more) and two other girls [Suzy (Lenka Novak) and Marcy (Katie
Dolan)], who proceed to drink Eddie's blood. In trying to find what happened to
their friend, Tom and Terry also stumble into the lair of the vampire
hookers." * Trivia: John Carradine's "real" name, as in the one given
to him at birth by his parents, was Richard Reed Carradine.
"If you thought the nadir of vampire comedies was Freddie
Francis' The Vampire Happening (1971
/ trailer) or Carl
Schenkel's Dracula Blows His Cool
(1979 / trailer),
then you haven't experienced Vampire
Hookers. [...] Carradine entertains himself spouting Shakespeare throughout [and] in between some of
the cheesier lines ('Blood is thicker than water' he says when one of his
vampire babes says she would prefer a Scotch and water), but I wouldn't call it
any more of a dignified performance than Vincent Price in Bloodbath at the House of Death (1984 / trailer). The other
actors are hampered by the script ('It's not murder, it's dinner!') with
Fairbairn coming across the best as the straight man while Wilson's Texan
fraidy cat is grating. [...] The surprise ending will be no surprise to anyone
who has seen The Fearless Vampire
Killers (1967 / trailer),
The Devil's Wedding Night (1973 / trailer) or either of
the Count Yorga films (1970 / trailer & 1971 / trailer). The ubiquitous
Vic Diaz (29 Jul 1932
– 15 Sept 2006) is once again on hand, here as moronic wannabe-vampire
manservant Pavo who spends much time playing vampire — with a burlap sack cape
and fake fangs — and farting. [DVD Drive-In]" But before we here at a wasted life digress and
begin rambling, let's look at the music to this film, both the soundtrack and
the title track. The only person credited is the prodigious Bolivian-American
composer and conductor Jaime
Mendoza-Nava (1 Dec 1925 – 31 May 2005), a talented musician behind the
music of a multitude of fondly and not-so-fondly remembered trash projects —
including the soundtrack (but not the title song) presented in Film Fun: Music from Movies – The Black
Klansman (USA, 1966). We would posit that Mendoza-Nava possibly wrote the music to the title track, Vampire
Hookers, though the catchy tune has very little stylistic congruency to the
composer's normal music. (Likewise, Mendoza-Nava was never known as a lyricist,
so it is extremely doubtful that he wrote the fabulously tacky lyrics.) Try as
we might, the identity of the singer remains a mystery we could not solve —
indeed, online there is almost zero information about the song, which also
seems to never to have had a release on vinyl (for which the world is
definitely a culturally poorer place). We were able, however, to find the
lyrics, which we present further below.
Closing credits to Vampire Hookers
with the full song
(almost):
Lyrics to Vampire Hookers:
Don't get hooked by a hooker
When you sail in seven seas
Even though she's a looker
She can bring you to your knees.
She'll take you to the graveyard
And try to ease your fears,
But her friends out in the graveyard
Have been dead for a hundred years.
They're the Vampire Hookers
Yeah, they're Vampire Hookers
Well, they're Vampire Hookers
And blood is not all they suck!
These girls are illusions,
They slit throats from ear to ear.
They want you for transfusions,
They'll never shed a tear.
They make real Bloody Marys
And have a grand old time,
But you'll find out if you visit
That your life's not worth a dime….
… To those Vampire Hookers
Yeah, they're Vampire Hookers
Well, they're Vampire Hookers
And blood is not all they suck!
So if you meet a hooker
And she seems so sweet and kind,
Be careful if you date her,
Your life may be on the line.
They're beautiful and sultry
But they're not what you expect.
You'll be begging them for mercy
[As they bite you in the neck
They're the Vampire Hookers
Yeah, they're Vampire Hookers,
Well, they're Vampire Hookers
and blood is not all they suck!
But to return to the movie: "[...] Vampire Hookers is a gonzo bit of WTF, where Carradine's pimp
bloodsucker makes wild claims like 'Shakespeare and Walt Whitman were both vampires.'
Startlingly inept, yet never less than entertaining in that 'what the hell is even
going on?' fashion [...]. This is absurdist weirdness of the highest order,
peaking with a ten-minute orgy scene where the most titillating aspect is all
the tan lines visible on these ladies of the night. [BirthMoviesDeath]" Of the three titular vampire hookers, Marcy (Katie Dolan) and Cherish
(Karen Stride) came from and returned to obscurity with this relatively obscure
film, though brunette Karen Stride did do some nude modeling and had negligible to minor
appearances in three other even more obscure movies: the blackly funny Runaway Nightmare (1982 / trailer), the lost
Stella Stevens vehicle Ladies Night
(1983), and Three-Way
Weekend (1979).
The third vampire hooker, the blonde Suzy (Lenka Novak), does however deserve a
second look, if only because she exuded an aura in her few film appearances
that indicated that her talent lay not just in the jiggle of her inviting breasts.
(We mention her in passing in our Babe
of Yesteryear entries Uschi Digard, Part X: 1977 and Marilyn Joi, Part IV: 1977-80.) Lenka Novak — that's her above on the cover of the Dec 78 issue of Oui magazine — had a very brief career
before disappearing, but she is remembered by many for her absolutely unforgettable
appearance in the classic "Catholic High School Girls In Trouble" skit
found in Kentucky Fried Movie (1977
/ trailer), the skit
we look at in both Babe of Yesteryear
entries mentioned above. She has an un-credited appearance in some of the
footage Al Adamson shot and added to Käpt'n
Rauhbein aus St. Pauli (1971 / a song) to make Nurses for Sale (trailer), a film we glance at in R.I.P. Heinz Reincke and Janine Reynaud, Part II – 1969-2000,
but alongside Vampire Hookers, all her
major credited film appearances happened between 77 & 79: Moonshine
County Express (1977 / trailer), Coach (1978 / trailer) and,
credited as Hana Byrbo, The Great
American Girl Robbery (1979 / trailer),
the last of which is also looked at in Marilyn Joi, Part IV: 1977-80. But then,
Ms. Novak disappeared… until 1988, when she suddenly reappeared one last time
for a small part in the unknown horror comedy, Slaughterhouse Rock (1988 / trailer)
and then disappeared again. To the common knowledge reiterated above, we might add: Prior to Lenka
Novak's short film career, as Olivia Paddon (and occasionally Olivia Elliot or
Lonka Berova) she was extremely active in Europe as what would now be
considered an often under-age glamour model. (The collection of 50 different
cover appearances was found at Vintage Erotica.) Boobepedia lists her place of birth as Shrewsbury, UK, but most
other sites say she is of Scandinavian origin. In 2019, JR-Sploitation was nice enough to
claim: "Lenka is still alive and well and residing in the Los Angeles
area. She is a very active person and enjoys the outdoors, traveling and
hiking. She is 62 years old now and was from Sweden originally. She started her
career off as a nude model over in Europe [...]. This was several years before
her Playboy appearance and was also
in several other US nudie mags such as Oui
and Juggs. She got married at the
end of the 80s and started a family afterwards and decided to drop out of the
public spotlight." Anyways, should you ever get around to actually watching Vampire Hookers and find yourself
liking it, then let us briefly draw your attention to the film's scriptwriter
Howard R. Cohen (12 Aug 1942 – 3 Apr 1999). He went on to write and direct
diverse films of greater and lesser non-note, including a guilty pleasure of
ours, the more funny than it deserves to be if not downright quaint PG-rated
horror comedy Saturday the 14th
(1981 / trailer); a
film we think sucks, Space Raiders (1983); and a breast-centric
cult-film fav, Barbarian Queen (1985
/ trailer). (The last
film, you might recall, features the actress Lana Jean Clarkson [5 Apr 1962 – 3 Feb 2003], whose star was
already fading when she met her tragic end at the wrong side of Phil Spector's
gun.) At the same time that Cohen & Santiago made Vampire Hookers, they also joined
forces to make the
cult samurai Blaxploitation film, Death
Force (1978). Both VH & DF were shown together as a double bill
at more than one low-rent movie house (which is perhaps why Vinegar
Syndrome combined them for a double DVD release in 2013). Trailer to
Death Force
(1978):