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      Cool It, Carol

      1970 1h 41m Other List
      Reviews 50% Audience Score 50+ Ratings Two small-town teenagers (Janet Lynn, Robin Askwith) move to London's West End and get involved in prostitution and pornography before tiring of big-city life. Read More Read Less

      Audience Reviews

      View All (6) audience reviews
      Audience Member It's not necessarily a 'dark' film, nor really a comedy, nor a dark comedy as it has a fairly upbeat style despite the desperate position of selling their bodies for money just to survive. As such it's more than watchable with a decent pace as events spiral into excesses of debauchery. Rated 3 out of 5 stars 02/06/23 Full Review Audience Member A young naive couple move to London to find work but are drawn to the seedier side Rated 2 out of 5 stars 02/10/23 Full Review Audience Member Synopsis: Tale of sexy teenager Carol and her boyfriend who journey to free-spirited 1960s London to seek fame, fortune and a taste of the high life. But when the pair's desire for decadent adventure is spent, can they get out of the scene? i missed the opportunity to share in the grind house experience by about a decade. I had a very specific view of exactly what it means to be a grind house picture, a view tailored almost solely from the Rodriguez- Tarantino mashup. To me that word means little more than a movie about a girl with a machine gun for a leg. Cool it Carol wasn't exactly what i had in mind. Sure, there was plenty of elements that fit the bill. Like the extent to which the film exploits woman and sex in general. Carol kind of loves taking off her clothes, and as a result the is a lot of sexual activity. So much in fact that the film resembles a pornographic picture, except instead of showing the sex we only hear sounds of gratification and the characters are afterwords left with nothing but their guilt and sadness. But the film is surprisingly free of the kind of off-center energy that can be found within the grind house homage by Tarantino and Rodriguez. It's not an action film, and an explosion is about the most unlikely event that could occur. The film took it's ol time and had a rather healthy supply of character development. The problem was that it was so lacking in energy one would have a rather difficult time in suspending his or her belief in the picture. For a movie about two young people going to the big city, striking out from their parent's domain and resorting to selling their bodies for income, the picture is shockingly void of complications. There aren't even any drugs, kind of a must for this story. The only thing Cool it Carol has going for it is it's sexuality and strong characterization. It's a pleasurable watch for those two reasons, but it's not very effective in it's execution of it's cliche'd plot. Rated 2.5 out of 5 stars 01/14/23 Full Review Audience Member another brilliant film by PETER WALKER, another brilliant performance by ROBIN ASKWITH and another dvd that captures the late 60's and i would recommend this to all who love robin askwiths work and pete walker Rated 4.5 out of 5 stars 01/22/23 Full Review Audience Member Joe and Carol are two barely legal adults who decide to leave their home in the sticks and head for the capitol, where like every clichéd kid before them, they think the streets will be paved with gold. Carol especially has reason to believe that she will do well, as she recently won first prize in a beauty pageant. Once they hit town, they soon find themselves broke and without much chance of a proper career. So wouldn’t you know it , Joe puts Carol on the game, and she’s a hit. Pretty soon they’re rolling in money. Made as little more than a lurid sexploitation film, Cool it Carol deals with the seamy underside of swinging sixties London, and is probably a bit more honest about what life was actually like than Darling or Smashing Time; it’s every bit as fetid as Poor Cow or Performance, but doesn’t dress itself in their realist airs or arty graces. Cool it Carol simply soaks its audience in the new possibilities that the sexual revolution, an new era which allowed young and old alike to indulge in promiscuous sex for kicks and cash, and allowed filmmakers to exploit the unwashed masses’ prurient interest in such things for a good deal of financial gain. Never mind free love, Cool it Carol tells us that what the 60s really stood for was cash for loveless copulation. Perhaps Cool it Carol is the most honest film of its time. The heroine is prophetically named Carol Thatcher, and like the later admirers her real life namesake’s mother she find her social success amongst people who believe that, as one character cynically observes, money can buy them anything. In some ways, Cool it Carol is an anti-morality tale – it shows that if you are young, talentless and attractive, you can get the high life by whoring yourself to the rich and powerful. Sadly, the film doesn’t go the whole distance and show Joe and Carol enjoying their ill-gotten wealth and celebrity (as people do on our TV screens every day nowadays…) but realise it hasn’t bought them happiness and so they go back home to the sticks. The film would have hit harder if Carol had accepted her role as a high class whore like Bernard Shaw’s Mrs Warren. Perhaps the still vigilant British censor, and the hypocritical audiences, would have rejected the film (a considerable hit at the time) if it had done so… Yet despite the tacked on Puritanism of the ending, for the most part Cool it Carol wallows in its own degradation to an admirable degree. On leaving smallville for the first time, Carol and Joe bonk on the train, Joe surprised that Carol gets turned on showing herself off. Carol’s sexuality is fairly complex and highly politically incorrect - she enjoys sex freely, likes exhibitionism and gets off on the idea of being sold to strangers, although when she’s used by manky old man after skanky old cur, she finds the reality a bit less appealing than the fantasy. Cool it Carol shows the world of fashion models, low tarts, high class hookers and hardcore film shoots to be all piled on top of each other, and the best sequence of the film shows a group of salacious old men drooling as Joe and Carol get it on for their 8mm lens. Their attitude as dirty old leering dogs in this section mirrors no doubt the viewership experience of many of Cool it Carol’s original audience, and there’s a thrilling moment when an old suit throws off his clothes and tries to join in with the youngster’s performance of sex for the camera. A cry goes up – “oh, you’ve spoilt it now” – and the dream of uninhibited sex for all comes crashing down. Earlier, at the film’s outset, we were show a butcher cleaving meat; he then cuts his own finger off, and human beings are ready for the grinder. For it’s visionary moments like this, Cool it Carol is truly a British cinema classic to be cherished. Rated 3.5 out of 5 stars 02/06/23 Full Review Audience Member Excellent Pete Walker movie, based on the true story of two kids (played by Robin Askwith and Janet Lynn) who run away to London from the country in search of glamour and excitement, which they eventually acheive through porn and prostitution. Tender, scary and darkly funny in turn, it's a true classic of 1970's cinema. Rated 4 out of 5 stars 01/19/23 Full Review Read all reviews Post a rating

      Cast & Crew

      Movie Info

      Synopsis Two small-town teenagers (Janet Lynn, Robin Askwith) move to London's West End and get involved in prostitution and pornography before tiring of big-city life.
      Director
      Pete Walker
      Screenwriter
      Murray Smith
      Genre
      Other
      Original Language
      English
      Runtime
      1h 41m