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“Hitler's brothel patrol on wheels I presume?”
Have you seen Fraulein Kitty? If so, you've seen this film too – Fraulein
Kitty is essentially a more streamlined version of the plodding norks 'n'
Nazis on a locomotive schtick found here in Hitler's Last Train aka Love
Train For The SS. Vaguely like Salon Kitty, but on the railway and
without the element of spying on disloyal officers, it's another cheap bit of
boob-filled Nazisploitation from Eurociné...
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screenshots…
“I am the mistress of some of the leading figures in
the Reich!” Opening with a cabaret act put on for the Nazi elite, that
endures as if narrative pace is the enemy, we find Ingrid (Monica Swinn)
and her young charge Greta (Sandra Mozarovski) surviving in war torn
Germany. Ingrid's father was a philosopher opposed to the ways of Hitler and
was executed – forcing Ingrid to feign allegiance to the Nazis in order to
survive – and now Greta finds herself in a similar predicament. It's Spring
1941, Germany is taking on the Russians, and an American journalist is penning
suspiciously favourable articles in his US newspaper that is staunchly anti-Nazi.
“There are lots of lovely things in Germany nowadays.”
It's a confusing – and surprisingly brief – plot that is dispensed with as
quickly as it is introduced. Ingrid goes from seducing the journalist to – via
a bizarre jump cut – rubbing herself furiously against the hairy chest of her
commander, Otto Kramer (Franck Brana, Pieces). It's a jumbled
start, particularly when the movie decides to jump in a different direction;
Ingrid is to take charge of a brigade of women, composed of apparent volunteers
and Aryan daughters of prestigious families, to entertain the officers on the
front line.
“Five, six, seven – this is heaven!” Soon
we're aboard the 'pleasure train' and the champagne is flowing – down gullets
and over naked bodies alike – with decadent threesomes and impromptu cabaret
acts galore taking place within the rickety confines of a decidedly familiar
set. The aim of the mission – and seemingly the film itself – beyond extended
bunk ups and tedious 'parties', seems obscure (or non-existent). There's
a brief moment when a dissenting General is carted away after a failed
assassination attempt on Hitler (relayed inexpensively via the radio),
and then they go wandering again.
“One could call it an erotic variation of the old
Russian game of roulette.” Cobbled together over the remainder of the
film and spread thin, Greta joins – then leaves – then rejoins the train, Otto
temporarily orders the girls to service the thuggish rank and file, and a
roving gang of marauding rebels storm the train. It sounds like a lot happens,
but considering the 108 minute run time – and in spite of further events that
follow – the film is woefully light on story or cohesion.
“To me you're still the same sweet child that you used
to be.” Compared to Fraulein Kitty (aka Captive Women 4)
it's a mixed bag. On the plus side there's more action, including multiple tank
battles (no doubt lifted from another production) and numerous gun
fights, but on the down side the plot makes bugger all sense and lacks any
semblance of drive. While FK stuffed its comparatively slender (yet
still sluggish) running time with unending shots of a moving train, it at
least had a concise and direct plot – not to mention a superior lead villain in
the form of Malisa Longo's Elsa (a kitten next to the She-Wolf that was
Ilsa, though).
“Well, I've always been precocious.” Payet's film, also know as Special Train For Hitler, lacks many things except
when it comes to ladies getting their kit off. Routinely the film grinds to a
halt to loiter around one sex scene after another (interspersed between yet
another sodding 'party'), and does have some peak moments of strangeness.
On the lighter side a Countess gets off with a train worker in the coal
carriage, but on the darker side a violent interlude with a gang of rebels
features a curiously long spanking sequence. Indeed, while Fraulein Kitty
generally had a jaunty tone, Hitler's Last Train boasts a nastier vibe,
which proves somewhat jarring against supposedly romantic scenes such as Greta
and a handsome Captain indulging in a tongue-waggling rut in some woodland
undergrowth.
“I'm all yours – the grand prize for the night.”
Strangely, the rebels are cast as brutish villains (seemingly recruited from
the 1970s) to be vanquished heroically by the Nazis, and the Americans are
shown to be slobbish and horny buffoons. It is a position that feels at odds
with the initial intentions of Ingrid – surviving in spite of the Nazis
– although, perhaps, you could argue that her apparent comfort sleeping with
the enemy is reflected in the film's confused loyalties.
“Hey, there's a girl there! That's funny, ain't it?”
Otherwise known as Captive Women 5: Mistresses of the 3rd Reich,
the film is over-long by at least twenty minutes, a problem that is compounded
by the disjointed and meandering script. More effort was spent on this
production compared to Fraulein Kitty – but not so far as the dodgy
audio and awful dubbing – although there's plenty of sauciness to help
re-balance proceedings a bit. Amidst the litany of extended scenes of porking,
there's leather boot licking/riding, cane sucking, and quite a bit of love
shown for riding crops. However, if you're only going to watch just one 'Nazi
pleasure train' movie from Eurociné, Fraulein Kitty is recommended over Hitler's
Last Train. They are both sorely flawed in certain respects, but under an
appropriate gaze their decidedly low budget limitations can still provide some
old school exploitation entertainment.
“We promise pleasure to all of you.” This is a
review of the full-length 108 minute version, but there is a shorter version
out there (such as a release in the USA and Canada) that clocks in at a
scant 75 minutes. Thinking speculatively, if they hacked out extraneous plot
then that might very well have improved things, but if they just trimmed away
all the bums, boobs, and bush, then you'd have to wonder why on earth you'd
bother watching it.
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