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On the way to grandma's house because Mom was arrested for soliciting, young and enticing Vanessa runs into Bob Wolverton, a child psychologist who uses his professional expertise to gain her trust, and then reveals himself to be "The Big Bad Wolf" who is out to abuse, torture and kill pretty, innocent girls -- with Vanessa intended to be his newest victim. She manages to shoot her assailant a number of times, but instead of being killed, he's disfigured in such a manner that he now looks like what he truly is -- a monster. Vanessa is accused of attempted murder. She is to be put on trial but escapes -- right into the waiting arms of the Big Bad Wolf. (official distributor synopsis)

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JFL 

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English Matthew Bright is either a cursed genius for whom there was no place in Hollywood, an irrational idiot, or just a filmmaking punk who has pissed on the classic standards of craftsmanship from on high. His filmography swings between the poles of the iconic underground Forbidden Zone and the star-studded melodrama Tiptoes. Freeway stands somewhere in the middle and shows Bright to be a diamond in the rough and subversive anarchist in equal measure. His directorial debut, which in its time was featured in the main section at Sundance, was produced under the auspices of Oliver Stone, who at the time was immersed in deranged visions of the outer fringes of America with projects like Natural Born Killers and U Turn. The crew was composed of a mix of dime-store fantasists reared by Roger Corman and renowned names, with Maysie Hoy at the fore, brought up by Robert Altman and Bright’s old buddy Danny Elfman. Despite the stellar cast, the film proudly shows off its punk pedigree with long, uninterrupted shots and exalted acting performances that evoke underground classics such as those of Christoph Schlingensief. After all, Freeway shares with Schlingensief’s projects not only an overarching principle of production, which we can summarise as “quickly, cheaply and furiously”, but also the basic concept of hysterically subversive appropriation of mainstream motifs and their emancipatory transference to a fringe environment, in this case the world of delinquents, streetwalkers and junkies. Bright’s paraphrase of Little Red Riding Hood manoeuvres between exploitation exuberance and soap-opera theatricality, while serving up an angry fairy tale that, with a feminist touch, takes into account traditional sexism and privileged arrogance. The journey of this Little Red Riding Hood with a lengthy rap sheet from a bleak home on the periphery, saturated with sexual abuse, drugs and social misery, to her grandmother’s home in a trailer park takes a lot of convoluted turns, including a reform school, that classic backdrop of movies about juvenile delinquents. But as in the story by the Brothers Grimm, the encounter with the wolf brings not only danger, but also an awakening and awareness of one’s own worth, not only in terms of how much to charge for a back-alley blowjob. ()

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