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Sisterhood, The

Sisterhood, The (1988) Movie Poster
  •  USA  •    •  75m  •    •  Directed by: Cirio H. Santiago.  •  Starring: Rebecca Holden, Chuck Wagner, Lynn-Holly Johnson, Barbara Patrick, Robert Dryer, Henry Strzalkowski, David Light, Jim Moss, Anthony East, Tom McNeeley, Warren McLean, Willy Schober, Peter Shilton.  •  Music by: Jun Latonio.
       The year is 2021 AD. Women have been enslaved by a brutal army of men who survived the nuclear holocaust. Their only hope for freedom is in the hands of a nomadic band of fierce she-warriors: The Sisterhood.

Trailers:

   Length:  Languages:  Subtitles:
 1:26
 
 

Review:

Image from: Sisterhood, The (1988)
Image from: Sisterhood, The (1988)
Image from: Sisterhood, The (1988)
Image from: Sisterhood, The (1988)
Image from: Sisterhood, The (1988)
Image from: Sisterhood, The (1988)
Image from: Sisterhood, The (1988)
Image from: Sisterhood, The (1988)
Image from: Sisterhood, The (1988)
Image from: Sisterhood, The (1988)
Image from: Sisterhood, The (1988)
Image from: Sisterhood, The (1988)
Image from: Sisterhood, The (1988)
Image from: Sisterhood, The (1988)
Image from: Sisterhood, The (1988)
In this goofy, female empowerment, post-holocaust tale from director Cirio H. Santiago ("Equalizer 2000"), it's the future year of 2021. In the deserts of Earth, men hold all the power and have enslaved many women. It's up to the nomadic ladies known as "The Sisterhood" to restore some sense of equality. Two such Sisters that we meet are Alee (Rebecca Holden) and Vera (Barbara Patrick, the wife of Robert P.). They take under their wing a teen aged girl named Marya (Lynn-Holly Johnson of "Ice Castles" and "For Your Eyes Only"), whose kid brother (Tom McNeeley) was killed by one of the male antagonists, a warrior named Mikal (Chuck Wagner, "America 3000").

"The Sisterhood" is good, light entertainment for sci-fi lovers who favor the cheesy and silly side of post-holocaust cinema. It does earn some points for portraying its women as strong and independent, but not invulnerable. It also gives Alee and Vera special powers - Vera is telekinetic and Alee has healing abilities. Our three heroines generate sufficient rooting interest, and all of our grunting pig villains are appropriately odious. Mikal is an exception, proving to be more than one-dimensional.

Fine use is made of locations. The sets, costumes, and vehicles look decent enough for whatever minimal budget "The Sisterhood" had. The music score by Jun Latonio is variable: sometimes it's passable, and at other times it is just awful. It's all pleasantly cheesy, with a little bit of gore (there's a few close ups of sword wounds) and a fair amount of action. The performances are actually not too bad - Robert Dryer, the main baddie in "Savage Streets", as the creepy Lord Barak, Anthony East as Lord Jak. The female cast is very attractive, and there are adequate doses of bare flesh throughout.

Watching this one is a harmless enough way to kill a little over an hour and a half.


Review by Scott LeBrun from the Internet Movie Database.