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Foxy Brown  /  Coffy

Foxy Brown
August 14, 2017 - 7:30 pm


Foxy Brown  (1974)

Intended as a sequel to Coffy, and originally released on the ultimate Blaxploitation double-bill with Jonathan Kaplan’s Truck Turner, Foxy Brown finds Pam Grier expanding on her previous tough-as-nails performances to embody the titular role of the “whole-lotta-woman” heroine of this gritty revenge flick.  With its funkadelic score from Motown Records singer-songwriter Willie Hutch and costumes by Jackson 5 stylist Ruthie West, writer-director Jack Hill’s final collaboration with Grier—at the time of its release a huge financial success—cemented the actress’s legacy as one of the first-ever action movie heroines.

35mm, color, 94 min.  Production: American International Productions.  Distribution: American International Pictures.  Director: Jack Hill.  Producer: Buzz Feitshans.  Screenwriter: Jack Hill.  Cinematographer: Brick Marquard.  Editor: Charles McClelland.  Music: Willie Hutch.  Cast: Pam Grier, Antonio Fargas, Peter Brown, Terry Carter, Kathryn Loder.

Coffy  (1973)

Following a string of highly popular women in prison films in the early 1970s, writer-director Jack Hill shifted deftly into the Blaxploitation genre for American International Pictures—one of the first indie production companies to utilize focus groups.  Attempting to appeal to a diverse urban audience, Hill cast the sensational Pam Grier in a star-making role as Nurse “Coffy” Coffin, “the baddest one-chick hit-squad that ever hit town.”  Focusing on a no-nonsense leading lady—a watershed moment for the male-driven genre—allowed for new narratives heretofore unrepresented anywhere on the big screen, including nuanced portrayals of the still-marginalized African-American experience. 

35mm, color 91 min.  Production: American International Productions,  F. P. Productions.  Distribution: American International Pictures.  Director: Jack Hill.  Producer: Robert Papazian, Buzz Feitshans.  Screenwriter: Jack Hill.  Cinematographer: Paul Lohmann.  Editor: Charles McClelland.  Music: Roy Ayers.  Cast: Pam Grier, Booker Bradshaw, Robert DoQui, William Elliott, Allan Arbus, Sid Haig.