01. My Baby, Your Baby 02. I'm Talking About You 03. One Weekend 04. Rock Me Baby 05. Bonie Moronie 06. She Does It RIght 07. Twenty Yards Behind 08. The More I Give 09. Boom Boom 10. All Through The City 11. Talk To Me Baby 12. Route 66 13. I Can Tell 14. Going Back Home 15. Don't You Just Know It 16. Roxette 17. Another Man 18. I Don't Mind 19. Riot In Cell Block #9 20. Rollin' And Tumblin'
Dona Speir, Roberta Vasquez, Cynthia Brimhall, Ava Cadell, Pandora Peaks
Silly sex romp disguised as a action/espionage film. Two beautiful American special agents are given a head start by an oriental crime boss. The head start is to get away from the teams of assassins he has lined up to kill them. Numerous visual costume changes later, the busty duo team up with other agents to make a convenient team of eight, all paired off in a boy/girl, boy/girl manner. It's a wonder that they aren't all killed as very little watching gets done while each couple take guard duty.
Erick Purkhiser (October 21, 1946 – February 4, 2009), better known as Lux Interior, was an American singer and a founding member of the legendary garage punk band The Cramps. Born in Stow, Ohio, he grew up in the Akron area with a brother, Mike Purkhiser. He met his wife Kristy Wallace, better known as Poison Ivy, in Sacramento in 1972 allegedly while she was hitchhiking. [2] The couple founded the band and moved from California to Ohio in 1973 and then to New York in 1975 where they became part of the flourishing punk scene. Interior's name came "from an old car commercial" while his wife's name change was inspired by "a vision she received in a dream".The couple called their musical style psychobilly, originally claiming it to have been inspired by a Johnny Cash song, and later saying that they just using the phrase as "carny terms to drum up business." Purkhiser died at 4:30am on February 4, 2009, in Glendale, California of a pre-existing heart condition.