The Louisiana Hussy

The Louisiana Hussy

1959 "She Got What She Wanted ... Giving Men What They Wanted!"
The Louisiana Hussy
The Louisiana Hussy

The Louisiana Hussy

5.4 | 1h25m | NR | en | Drama

Cajun newlyweds must deal with the jealousy of his brother, who also loved her, and the arrival of a mysterious seductress in their bayou backwater.

View More
AD

WATCH FREEFOR 30 DAYS

All Prime Video
Cancel anytime

Watch Now
5.4 | 1h25m | NR | en | Drama , Crime | More Info
Released: April. 01,1959 | Released Producted By: Bon Aire Productions , Country: Budget: 0 Revenue: 0 Official Website:
Synopsis

Cajun newlyweds must deal with the jealousy of his brother, who also loved her, and the arrival of a mysterious seductress in their bayou backwater.

...... View More
Stream Online

The movie is currently not available onine

Cast

Nan Peterson , Peter Coe , Betty Lynn

Director

Norman Pringle

Producted By

Bon Aire Productions ,

AD

Watch Free for 30 Days

All Prime Video Movies and TV Shows. Cancel anytime.

Watch Now

Trailers & Images

Reviews

blankenshipdk Nan Peterson literally rolls onto the scene after a harrowing horseback escape while sporting a sweater with an M L monogram emblazoned across her sculpted torso, which she claims stands for Minette Lanier, never mind the association with Marie Laveau. Upon her rescue and transport to town by Peter Coe as Jacques Guillot, the story begins to suck you in like Cajun quicksand. Jacques and his brother Pierre, played by Robert Richards, get their stones rolling via the coquettish Minette, yet still manage to gather a lot of moss as apparently there's a market for that stuff somehow. Minette skinny dips, dances in her bra to radio rock n' roll and initiates petting parties like a 50's anti-heroine busting out of the constraints of squareness in a seething cauldron of southern fried crawdad stew. These characters are engaging and of course get involved in inevitable spurts of violence, yet the last thing you want to see is any of them hurt or killed, based on an empathy for the players that seems rare in movies these days. There is a plot twist that is logical and unexpected which seamlessly rolls into the main story line. Full spectrum black and white low end production values only enhance the southern Gothic mise en scene. Betty Lynn of Andy Griffith fame along with character actor Harry Lauter and some lesser known figures add some spice to the cinematic gumbo which goes down quite smoothly.
Woodyanders Sexy and duplicitous Minette (saucily played by the fetching Nan Peterson) is found unconscious in the swamp. She's taken to the home of newlywed Pierre Guillot (a likable portrayal by Robert Richards), whom Minette tries to make the moves on. After Pierre rebuffs her advances, Minette moves in with and seduces Pierre's brother Jacques (a solid performance by Peter Coe). Director Lee Sholem offers a flavorsome evocation of the down-home rural setting with a strong sense of the region and the people who populate it. Charles Lang's compact script covers the hicksploitation bases in a pleasing manner: An enticing and conniving no-count tramp antagonist, a gnarled old backwoods hag, a rousing dramatic conclusion, some mild titillation (Minette goes skinny-dipping at one point), and several rough'n'tumble fights between the two principal conflicting siblings. Moreover, the competent acting by the sturdy cast holds this picture together, with especially sound contributions from Betty Lynn as Pierre's sweet wife Lili, Harry Lauter as dissolute rich dude Clay Lanier, Tyler McVey as the easygoing Dr. J.B. Opie, and Howard Wright as amiable old-timer Cob. The crisp black and white cinematography by Tom and Vincent Saizis makes nice occasional use of wipes. A fun diversion.
earlytalkie This film, which has an intriguing story and good location photography, is one of the most inept productions I've ever seen. Nan Peterson makes Cleo Moore look like a great actress in the name role. She struts around in tight clothes chasing everything in pants. The male actors, whose names I forget, win the prize for possibly the worst acting ever in a sound film. The laughable fight scenes are choreographed so poorly it makes one long for the old Republic serials. The only decent acting job in this potboiler comes from Betty Lynn, known mostly today from her role as Barney's girl friend in The Andy Griffith Show. According to Wikipedia, this screen classic was released in April, 1959 which I find puzzling. One scene has our lovely heroine doing a sleazy twist, a dance which, I believe, was not popular in 1959. In the last sequence, the lovely Miss Peterson is seen seducing a passerby driving a 1961 model Cadillac. Perhaps this screen gem was re-issued in 1961 with a few new scenes inserted. Several love scenes are interpolated which are quite steamy for 1959 (61?). If you ever enjoyed the Cleo Moore-Hugo Haas epics from the same era, you will enjoy this. I began watching this streaming on You Tube, from the "Alpha Special Edition" and couldn't turn it off. My friend and I were howling with laughter during the first five minutes. "She's a bad woman-a nymphomaniac!"
melvelvit-1 Down in Cajun country, two brothers, Jacques and Pierre Guillot, are in love with the same woman and tensions boil over when the girl, Lily, decides to marry Pierre but on the day of the wedding, Jacques finds a badly beaten woman in the bayou and brings her home. The girl, Minette, immediately makes a play for Pierre but it's Jacques who falls hard and the brothers come to blows. The newlyweds do a little digging and discover the girl recently seduced a wealthy landowner which drove his wife to suicide but her past catches up to the unscrupulous tart as she's chased through the swamps with a gun and run out of town once more. The brothers make up as Minette puts the make on a passing motorist.This type of trashy titillation rarely pretends to be anything other than what it is: low-budget grind-house and Drive-In exploitation fare. The familiar plot line echoes the Beverly Michaels cult film WICKED WOMAN (1953) and predates Russ Meyer by a few years in its depiction of a brazen backwoods tramp. Nan Peterson makes a voluptuous Minette and plays the nymphomaniac with relish from the opening sequence of her fleeing on horseback with bullets whizzing past her head to the closing shot where she's lustily digging her nails into the back of the Good Samaritan who's stopped to help her. The story only spans a few days but this voracious vixen seduces nearly every man she meets within minutes. Nan plays her bedroom scenes in a white bra (two years before Janet Leigh in PSYCHO) as the shadows on the wall make coitus very clear. Stories like this have been known to have loftier intentions and deeper meaning lurking beneath the sex and sin. The premise of a man stumbling upon an unconscious girl and bringing her home to his family -only to have her rip their world apart- is a universal one and can be seen in such diverse films as Luis Bunuel's Mexican SUSANA (1950), Finland's THE WITCH (1952), and Italy's Gothic LURE OF THE SILA (1949) with Silvana Mangano. THE LOUISIANA HUSSY is enjoyable nonsense with only one thing on its mind and doesn't outstay its welcome. Betty Lynn ("Lily") would go on to play good girl "Thelma Lou" on Andy Griffith's "Mayberry R.F.D." and the country doctor who uncovers Minette's secret is named "Opie". Go figure.