Lager SSadis Kastrat Kommandantur isn’t the kind of movie you put on for your mom, unless your mom is Eva Braun.
Blame director Sergio Garrone, whose career went from Westerns like If You Want to Live… Shoot! and Django the Bastard to the Kinski giallo/mad scientist/krimi movies The Hand That Feeds the Dead and Lover of the Monster, and a very late in the game — 1981! — giallo starring Corinne Clery and George Lazenby, L’ultimo harem.
But most people will remember him for his two Nazi movies. He made this at the same time as SS Lager 5: L’inferno delle donne AKA SS Camp: Women’s Hell, and they share many of the same shots. Same idea, I guess, as the war is almost over, but this camp wants to perfect the master race before time runs out.
How rough does it get? Even the ads for this movie started the UK video nasty era.
Helmut (Mircha Carven) is, I guess, our hero. He’d rather read than pal around with his fellow SS officers and soon falls for Mirelle (Paola Corazzi, who really ends up in the most horrific of Italian exploitation and remains gorgeous no matter what) while everyone else works on mating women with the officers to try and fix Col. Von Kleiben’s (Giorgio Cerioni) decimated balls, I kid you not. Yes, we see a flashback where a Jewish woman once bit them clean off. How do you fix a problem like Von Kleiben’s balls?
Matilde Dall’Aglio, who was one of the people watching the snuff movie in Emanuelle In America, is in this, along with Agnes Kalpagos (not her first or last Nazi movie), Mara Carisi (who is in the somewhat classier Salon Kitty), Inga Alexandrova, Giovanna Mainardi and Patrizia Melega, who goes for it as the sapphic doctor in charge of most of this.
Do you like long surgery scenes? How about shocking people in electric chairs until they piss themselves? Want an unhappy ending? This has all of that and more, a movie that is like Salo but has no redeeming social commentary, just people doing a woman in prison movie with fascist uniforms. Unlike WIP films, this has women boiled alive and also frozen, so if you’re seeking that, good news. This will deliver.
The 88 Films release of this film has a new 4K remaster from the original negative. It looks great, and watching blood-boiling and electric-chair-pissing in ultra-high definition is an experience that will make even a seasoned grindhouse veteran blink. Extras include audio commentary by Italian cinema experts Eugenio Ercolani and Nanni Cobretti; interviews with Sergio Garrone, Pierpaolo De Sanctis, Eugenio Alabiso and Maurizio Centini; there’s also the Italian opening and closing titles; a trailer; a reversible sleeve with censored and uncensored art and a book with articles by Tim Murray and Rachael Nesbit. You can get this from MVD in UHD and Blu-ray formats.

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