• Warning: Spoilers
    Isn't it strange that the only force that could unite every heterosexual teenage boy's dream of seeing Linnea Quigley, Brinke Stevens and Michelle Bauer together in the same movie would be David DeCoteau and that he would do it more than once?

    Quigley is Melody, a girl with bad teeth. Come on, who is going to love her? And Brinke as Marci? She has glasses! Surely a fate worse than death. Or what Bauer's Mickey must endure, as she's overweight. Luckily - or not - for our girls, they're possessed and suddenly make the minor cosmetic changes needed to become popular.

    Of course, before they get revenge, they must take a bath together.

    I guess never let it be said that DeCoteau didn't know what his audience wanted.

    Made for $40,000 using left-over film, cast, and crew from Sorority Babes in the Slimeball Bowl-O-Rama, this is the kind of film where the actresses do their own makeup and posters from past films are considered set decoration.

    Except something weird happened. The company distributing the film went out of business and less than 2,000 copies of the tape were ever distributed. The film became an instant collector's item as tales of the bath scene grew legendary. When it eventually aired on USA Up All Night, that scene was no longer in the movie, replaced with the girls jumping on a bed.

    Luckily, today we have companies like Vinegar Syndrome willing to put stuff out like this for the masses. And by masses, I mean maniacs like me that laid awake at night wondering if they'd ever see this movie.