The Black Gestapo

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The Black Gestapo
Black gestapo.jpg
Theatrical release poster
Directed by Lee Frost
Screenplay by Lee Frost
Wes Bishop
Story by Ronald K. Goldman
Lee Frost
Wes Bishop
Produced byWes Bishop
Starring Rod Perry
Charles P. Robinson
CinematographyDerek Scott
Edited byJoanna Terbush
Music byAllan Alper [1]
Production
company
Saber Productions
Distributed byBryanston Distributors
Release date
  • March 1975 (1975-03)
Running time
90 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish

The Black Gestapo (also released as Ghetto Warriors) is a 1975 American crime film about a vigilante named General Ahmed, who starts an inner-city "People's Army" to protect the black citizens of Watts. [2] [3] [4] However, when the Army succeeds in chasing the mob out of town, Ahmed is replaced by his colleague Colonel Kojah, who reforms the movement into a National Socialist criminal organization in order to have complete control over the town. [5]

Contents

It was written and directed by Lee Frost, and stars Rod Perry, Charles P. Robinson, Phil Hoover, Ed Cross and features a cameo from Russ Meyer regular Uschi Digard. It depicts African-American men dressed as Nazis and contains many scenes of violence (including a castration scene) and soft-core nudity. [6]

Cast

Critical responses

Writing in Allmovie, critic Donald Guarisco wrote that the film "lives up [to] the offensive potential of its title by cramming every bit of nastiness it can muster into its short running time," and that although it "is socially irresponsible [...] At its best, it's even inspired in a very twisted sort of way." [7] Critic Matthew Roe wrote in Under the Radar magazine that the "nazi iconography in this film is as subtle as the apocolypse," that "everything about this film screams 70s action schlock," and although "there are scattershot moments of interesting introspection, the movie keeps the dial cranked up and keeps cheap thrills coming its entire runtime." [8]

As the Gestapo was the interior secret service of the Third Reich, it appears that the producers of the movie mixed the name up with the paramilitaric SS which was founded as the private army of the Nazi Party and fits much more to the organisation showed in the movie, so the movie's title would have been more accurate as "The Black SS" rather than "The Black Gestapo".

See also

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References

  1. Allan Alper – The Black Gestapo (Original Motion Picture Soundtrack) at Discogs
  2. The Black Gestapo at The Grindhouse Cinema Database
  3. "The Black Gestapo (1975)" at DAARAC (Department of Afro–American Research and Culture, December 11, 2008)
  4. Decker, Nathan. "The Black Gestapo (1975)" (Million Monkey Theater B–Movie Reviews, January 2010)
  5. Walker, David. "blaxploitation archive – THE BLACK GESTAPO" (April 12, 2014)
  6. Strack, Nathan. "The Black Gestapo (1975)" at Awesome B Movies (June 11, 2015)
  7. Guarisco, Donald. "The Black Gestapo (1975)". Allmovie. Netaktion LLC. Retrieved 2022-04-06.
  8. Roe, Matthew. "Soul Team Six". Under the Radar. Under the Radar Magazine. Retrieved 2022-04-06.