Killer Bitch

Killer Bitch is a 2010 British action-horror film written and directed by Liam Galvin and produced by Yvette Rowland, Liam Galvin, and John Fleming.[1] The film contains a real sex scene featuring Ben Dover which was filmed as hardcore porn but edited to softcore for the final cut of the film.[2] It also features a controversial sex scene with Alex Reid.[3]

Killer Bitch
DVD cover (UK)
Directed byLiam Galvin
Produced by
  • Liam Galvin
  • Yvette Rowland
Written byLiam Galvin
Starring
Music by
  • Electric Eel Shock
  • Stefano Barone
  • Will Crewdson
  • Dead Family
  • Dean Rees
  • The Hyads
  • Isaac's Aircraft
  • MC Spanish Fly
  • Pussycat & The Dirty Johnsons
  • Rachel Stamp
  • Rotten Ped
  • Serotonin
  • Sid Sings
  • Sweet Felicity Arkwright
Distributed byKaleidoscope Home Entertainment
Release date
  • 3 May 2010 (2010-05-03)
Running time
92 minutes
CountryUnited Kingdom
LanguageEnglish

Plot

A woman is forced into a deadly game in which she has to kill five people. If she fails, all her friends and family will be butchered.

Notoriety

The film became notorious in the UK in August 2009, shortly after shooting started, when tabloid newspapers the News of the World and The People carried stories implying that the film's star, Katie Price's then-boyfriend Alex Reid had been involved in a "vile" rape scene and that Killer Bitch was a pornographic film.[4][5] This was denied by Price who claimed that neither she nor Reid would in any way be involved in a film glorifying rape as she herself had been raped.[6] This further stoked controversy.

Reid was subsequently reported to have 'walked off' from the film leaving several of his scenes un-shot.[7]

The film featured crime figures: Dave Courtney, Roy Shaw, Howard Marks, Carlton Leach and others Page 3 models and boxers, cage fighters and martial arts competitors. The publicity storm surrounding the film in the UK was stoked around the world including Australia,[8] the Middle East, India and the United States.[6] and when, during post-production, Alex Reid won the British TV series Celebrity Big Brother.[9]

Further controversy surrounded the film in March 2010 when the British Board of Film Classification, after four screenings, was said to be unhappy about the film's sexual content and would demand cuts to Alex Reid's sex scene with actress and producer Yvette Rowland.[9] In fact, they passed the whole film uncut with an '18' certificate.[10]

The original publicity for the film had said it involved real fights, real criminals, real sex; after release, the film's executive producer claimed "the movie features real violence, real gangsters and real hardcore sex scenes".[9]

Reception

Reviewing the film, James Benefield of the Eye For Film website stated "None of the acting - including the stunt casting - is up to much... with such a dull premise and script, it's surprising Liam Galvin has assembled this notorious cast. The film's main loser is the viewer seeking it out on the back of the publicity generated by this casting."[11]

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.