THE WORKING GIRLS

Stephanie Rothman

Scen.: Stephanie Rothman. F.: Daniel Lacambre. M.: John A. O’Connor. Mus.: Michael Andres. Int.: Sarah Kennedy (Honey), Laurie Rose (Denise), Mark Thomas (Nick), Lynne Guthrie (Jill), Solomon Sturges (Vernon), Ken Del Conte (Mike), Eugene Elman (Sidney), Mary Beth Hughes (signora Borden). Prod.: Charles S. Swartz per Dimension Pictures. DCP. D.: 81’. Col.

info_outline
T. it.: Italian title. T. int.: International title. T. alt.: Alternative title. Sog.: Story. Scen.: Screenplay. F.: Cinematography. M.: Editing. Scgf.: Set Design. Mus.: Music. Int.: Cast. Prod.: Production Company. L.: Length. D.: Running Time. f/s: Frames per second. Bn.: Black e White. Col.: Color. Da: Print source

Film Notes

Revisiting a format made popular by Depression-era films such as Three on a Match, Stephanie Rothman’s independent feature follows three young, single women as they make their way in the Big City – here, the tie-dyed Los Angeles of the 1970s, where a spirit of personal liberation and new possibilities is in the air. Honey (Sarah Kennedy) is a farmfresh newcomer who arrives in the city with no money and no job, who finds a job as a paid companion to a lonely millionaire. Denise (Laurie Rose) is an artist who paints billboards for a living and gets involved with a street musician with a dark secret. Jill (Lynne Guthrie) is a law student who takes a job as a cocktail waitress and finds herself involved with a gangland enforcer. With humor and irony, Rothman elegantly undermines the voyeuristic conventions of the exploitation film genre while exploring themes of female friendship, ambition, and sexuality.
“I packaged it as I was hired to do as a pretty, sexy, graphically strong (I hope), comic film. Today film scholars call this Second Wave Exploitation, but when I made it it was known as a low-budget exploitation film that had to be more transgressive than major studio films to compete. Even then, to my surprise and pleasure, there were a few scholars and reviewers who saw beyond those trappings to its core message. For me it has always been a film about the quest for identity that we are all on when we are young. It is a serious film about three underemployed young women whom no one takes seriously – enough. By the film’s end, they have learned such life lessons as: an open heart can lead to the warmth of friendship; the impermanence of love and the pain of loss; desire for the wrong man is not good for one’s ethics or ambitions; and most surprising of all, learning how to be a capitalist can lead to becoming a utopian socialist.” (Stephanie Rothman)

Dave Kehr

Copy From

restored in 4K in 2023 by MoMA – The Museum of Modern Art in collaboration with Stephanie Rothman at Cineric laboratory, from the only known complete 35mm print from the personal collection of the director. Funding by The Celeste Bartos Fund for Film Preservation.