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About 35 years ago, Charles Manson (Thomas Delcarpio) had his family
kill Sharon Tate and friends to instigate a race war by planting false
evidence on some local blacks. Then he and company hid in a bunker to sit
out the race war that he figured the blacks would win, but since he
figured them the inferior race, he thought he and his family could return
from the bunker 35 years later as the perfect ruling class, as they could
show the blacks their places. 35 years later: Charles has long died, and
so have many of his followers, while his bunker has become a rape camp ...
but Charles has also left an offspring, Kendra (Maria Natapov), which upon
his decree mustn't be raped (the rapes were his way of creating offspring)
and have a comparatively ordinary life, and she was to be schooled by
Manson's second-in-command Dan Masucci (Lucas Fleming). And now Manson's
followers finally rise to surface level, and find San Francisco, which
they planned to take over, in a very healthy state - apart from race
segregation - but now it's the whites who live in ghettos, aren't allowed
to eat in "black" restaurants or even entering certain districts
without being harrassed by the police. Dan leads his men, Charles' family,
into San Francisco, but they are almost all massacred, only he and Kendra
escapes, but separately from one another, but while Dan returns to the
family to instill even more hatred, Kendra learns what it's like to be
white in a black society and is slightly traumatized ... until she meets
Lucius (Constantine Taylor), who proves to her that not all blacks
subscribe to the black supremacy idea, and even arms her for the way back
to her flock, even though her father Charles Manson is hated by the black
community with a passion. When Kendra returns to the "family"
though, she finds most of them being slaughtered by angry blacks, and
learns that Dan is off to kill the Mayor (Blake Rickerson), one of the man
who promotes racial peace actually. And now she knows it's up to her to
save the day - but to do that it takes more than one ambitious white girl
... With its reversal of racial stereotypes, Honky Holocaust
sure enough is reminiscent of the John Travolta-Harry Belafonte
starrer White Man's Burden from almost 20 years earlier - but
really, the similarities are only very superficial, as while the earlier
movie supressed the satirical tones of its story to tell a more
straightforward adventure piece with tacked on social comment, Honky
Holocaust is much blunter but also much more honest in bringing its
point across, doesn't shy away from broad comedy, dick and castration
jokes, gross-out scenes en masse - but that said, the film is also
well-writtena and well-acted enough to bring its story across, and the
direction, often reminiscent of 1980s action movies, should do its bit to
rell in genre fans. Well, basically this is a fun movie that's a little
silly, too (and intentionally so) ... but it might make you think a bit
all the same!
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