Wednesday, July 8, 2026

 Queen of the Blues (1979) - Willy Roe.

Delightfully diminutive, deliciously delectable Top Shelf sin siren Mary Millington plays crowd-teasing stripper Queen of the blues in crude, gaudy, boorishly smutty 70s romp Queen of The Blues. Two not altogether convincing hoods apply pressure on the club's new owners to illicit protection money, fortunately, these lacklustre interludes are libidinously enlivened by saucy strumpets jiggling rhythmically about in the nude! Awkwardly presenting itself like an extended novelty episode of The Sweeney, with unsophisticated humour, and amusingly bogus nookie, it would be entirely just to state that gorgeous Mary Millington's sensually luminous presence remains the most cogent reason to watch it. Queen of the Blues is a mostly uninspired, tackily opportunistic, moderately raincoat-twitching nullity, yet composer David Whittaker's bouncy, disco-delicious score provides the lithe backbeat to Millington's erotic, enticingly limber, never less than scintillating performances.









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