Creator's Statement

In this video essay, “Busting Out: Caged Heat and the Women-in-Prison Film,” we examine the 1974 exploitation film Caged Heat. An example of the women-in-prison film, it was the directorial debut of Jonathan Demme and produced for Roger Corman’s off-Hollywood studio, New World Pictures. Our research aim was to situate the movie in historical and genre terms in order to demonstrate how women-in-prison films like Caged Heat both exploit and objectify women’s bodies even as they offer potentially empowering depictions of agency, queerness, cooperation, and rebellion.

We trace the history of the genre through its “social problem” era, the 1930s-1950s, and into its “exploitation” era, the 1960s-1970s. Our preliminary research included primary and secondary sources, including PCA files, reviews, promotional materials, and, of course, the films themselves. The visual sensationalism of these movies – which at once exploit women’s bodies as sites of spectacle and depict potentially empowering characterizations – led us to create a visual argument using the films themselves.

In our first section, “Incarcerated Women in Film,” we use clips from women-in-prison films from 1929 to 1955 to situate this genre within the realm of the “social problem” picture. With their stark mise-en-scene and harsh photography, their unglamorous make-up and costumes, and their often tragic endings, these movies convey cynical messages about the cycles of violence and incarceration perpetuated by the prison industrial complex, depicting women as being particularly vulnerable to all manner of abuses within it.

In our second section, “Exploitation Cinema: The Roger Corman Years,” we narrow our focus to an exploitation “auteur” whose career paralleled both an increase in cinematic sensationalism and tumultuous off-screen social changes. On their lurid surface, the Corman women-in-prison films appear to forgo social messages in favor of raw exploitation. We argue, however, that that even as these women-in-prison films exploit the spectacle of confined and brutalized female bodies, they also encourage the viewer to root for female insurrection and emancipation.

In our third section, “Caged Heat: A Case Study,” we further narrow our focus to argue that this film embodies the extremes of both the genre’s exploitation and emancipation tendencies. We examine its salacious depiction of – as the trailer promised – “the female jungle of women’s prison USA, a seething hell of steel and stone where […] caged passions ignite in carnal confinement and explode into violence,” and explore its subversive ending, in which the women team up for a successful prison break.

With its volatile combination of exploitative and empowering impulses, the women-in-prison film lays bare, as it were, fascinating, complex contradictions about genre, gender and the representation of the female body both chained and unchained.

Note: The authors would like to thank Janet Bergstrom for inspiring us to create this video for her seminar on Contemporary Film Criticism in 2008, and for her guidance and support during its production. In attempting to revise the video for publication, we found that we no longer had the original source files, so we could not “unmix” any of the original tracks (sound mix, image dissolves, etc.). Additionally, in trying to add even minor edits, we were unpleasantly surprised by audio artifacts and aspect ratio conundrums due to changes in audio codecs and software functionality in the seven years since the original production. So we have decided to post the video in its original, unrevised condition, as an artifact of video essay production from 2008.

 

 

Reviews

Review by Catherine Grant

I am in favor of publishing this video as it has been submitted because, even though it could undoubtedly be improved, it was made more than six years ago (I believe) and updating it would involve more than stylistic or technical changes. I’m assuming that the team that made it may not be able to reconvene. But I think this video is good enough in a number of respects, not least of which is its historical context as a work made before online video essays really took off as a genre. I would argue, therefore, that it can be of significant value to [in]Transition not least as the starting point for useful discussion about what video essays can be nowadays.

As a continuing fan of the genre it treats, I enjoyed watching the video a great deal. I appreciated the love and respect for the genre that clearly underpin its editing procedures. It feels particularly timely, in an aca-fan context, to be reminded of the history of the women in prison genre, given the current popularity of TV shows like Orange is the New Black. But, more importantly, the video also offers a well-organized, comprehensive and consequently valuable (theoretically informed) historical survey of the ‘women in prison’ movie corpus up to 1974.

I would argue that the video operates more successfully as a short documentary than as a video essay. It locates itself clearly and confidently in a factual and explanatory mode, with a few nice touches of humor (indeed, in its particular mode of address it reminds me of some of the more docu-like video essays that Kevin Lee has made with Kristin Thompson about filmic cycles and historically and geographically located film production). It is particularly useful as an audiovisual record of the women’s prison movie in one place, assembling, as it does, a very rich variety of film excerpts. I believe the video succeeds in its clear research aim “to situate the movies in historical and genre terms in order to demonstrate how women-in-prison films like Caged Heat both exploit and objectify women’s bodies even as they offer potentially empowering depictions of agency, queerness, cooperation, and rebellion.”