- Grindhouse
A grindhouse is an American term for a theater that mainly showed
exploitation films . It is named after the defunctburlesque theatres, on 42nd Street,New York , where 'bump n' grind' dancing andstriptease used to be on the bill. [http://www.grindhouse.com Grindhouse] ] In the filmLady of Burlesque (1943) one of the characters refers to the burlesque theatre, on 42nd Street, where they are performing stripteases and bump and grind dances, as a "grindhouse".The introduction of
television greatly eroded the audience for local and single-screen movie theatres, many of which were built during the cinema boom of the 1930s. In combination withurban decay afterwhite flight out of older city areas in the mid to late 1960s, changing economics forced these theatres to either close or offer something that television could not. In the 1970s these theatres were put to new use as venues for exploitation films , either adultpornography and sleaze, orslasher horror and dubbedmartial arts films fromHong Kong .Grindhouse films are of characteristically poor quality from both an artistic and a technical standpoint. Grindhouse theatres were typically quite seedy. Patrons were attracted not so much by the film, but by the opportunity to spend long periods of time in a darkened theatre where they could sleep, masturbate, utilise
prostitutes , drink alcohol, or consume illegal drugs in a permissive environment. This was further facilitated by double, triple, and "all night" bills on a single admission charge.Some drive-ins screened grindhouse material, but by definition a grindhouse is an indoor theatre.
Grindhouses began to disappear in the early 1980s due to city ordinances and crackdowns, and the advent of the
VCR which broughtpornography into the private home. Very few are in existence today.References
External links
* [http://www.brightlightsfilm.com/18/18_grind.html A review of "Grindhouse: The Forbidden World of "Adults Only" Cinema"] , by Eddie Muller and Daniel Faris.
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