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CREEMEDIA

In case you hadn’t noticed, there's a Plasmatics revival of sorts going on. Part of it can be attributed to the MOR (!) success of former Plasma Jean Beauvoir's Drums Along The Mohawk album, whose "feel the heat" was used as the hate theme in Cobra—but most of the movement has been spearheaded by no less a personage than that dumbsel of distress.

December 1, 1986

CREEMEDIA

DEPARTMENTS

PLASTIC MAN

REFORM SCHOOL GIRLS (New World Pictures)

by Jeffrey Morgan

In case you hadn’t noticed, there's a Plasmatics revival of sorts going on. Part of it can be attributed to the MOR (!) success of former Plasma Jean Beauvoir's Drums Along The Mohawk album, whose "feel the heat" was used as the hate theme in Cobra—but most of the movement has been spearheaded by no less a personage than that dumbsel of distress. Wendy Orlean Williams.

Just consider the astute career moves she’s made since the demise of the 'Matics* a single with Lemmy Kilmeister; two solo albums; ensuing Grammy nomination; photo ‘■spread" in Playboy (banned in Canada), and the starring role in the latest Tom DeSimone flick, Reform School Girls

The third part of the trilogy that also includes Concrete Jungle and Prison Girls, RSG is the story of the Pridemore Juvenile Reform School, where good girls learn to be bad and bad girls learn to be even worse. And none of 'em are worse at what they do than Miz Wendy, who plays a teenage lesbian under the auspices of bible-thumping warden Sybil Danmng That's right, this is a science fiction movie.

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