Faster, Pussycat! Kill! Kill! (1965): Sex, Speed & Second-Wave Fury

February 24
54 mins

Episode Description

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In this episode of The Problematic Gaze, we revisit Russ Meyer’s cult classic Faster, Pussycat! Kill! Kill! (1965) and ask: could it get away with it today?

We explore its violent, quotable tale of three go-go dancers tearing through the California desert—drag racing, fighting, kidnapping, and flipping gender roles on their head. Is it pure exploitation, accidental feminism, or both?

In our Culture Corner, we set the film against 1965 Britain: post-austerity optimism, Swinging London, strict gender expectations, censorship, racism, and a society on the brink of change. We look at what life was really like for women at the time—limited rights, rigid roles, and growing feminist unrest.

We unpack the film’s kinky boots, hyper-feminine styling, and female rage; Russ Meyer’s provocative worldview; and the movie’s journey from box-office flop to cult touchstone. Along the way, we consider its influence on everyone from Quentin Tarantino to riot grrrl culture and pop icons like Madonna and Beyoncé.

Can a film objectify women while also celebrating their power? We debate, we rate it, and we leave you to decide.


Watch Faster Pussycat! Kill! Kill! on YouTube


GAZER HOMEWORK: Next week we watch The Worm That Turned from The Two Ronnies. Watch it here on YouTube

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