Guess I should put some more effort into this. Thus, as of the current status of my review of all fur media, I present the greatest fur film of the 1970s, The Bitch. It has a couple of things in common with the greatest fur film of the 1930s, The Mad Miss Manton: lots of furs and a protagonist with a funny name. Something it does not have in common… lots of softcore scenes. 

This is our note that this is an R-rated movie, and our update references some “adult themes.” Continue at your own discretion.

The Bitch – The Film

The titular character, Fontaine Khaled (Joan Collins), is a woman fallen on hard times, something the film only tells and in no way shows, thankfully. She’s divorced her billionaire husband, and her nightclub is struggling. For those interested, the thrilling details of these events are lovingly rendered in the film The Stud. If I recall correctly, that film has one fur in it, and not for very long. The film follows Fontaine’s romance with a grifter in debt to the mob and culminates with fixing a horse race. It’s a boring melodrama that exists solely for the extended, not particularly explicit sex scenes. Even then, there aren’t a lot of them, either. Yet, it was one of the biggest films in the UK in 1979 and helped revive Collins’ career.

The Bitch – The Furs

Again, there’s little reason to care about anything that happens in the film; just enjoy a cavalcade of the late 70s immense fur goodness. Honestly, this is pretty much an 80s fur film, but release dates do not lie.

Starting slow. Our love interest, Nico, meets up with a shady character and his girlfriend at the New York airport when he first notices Fontaine. I believe this is Alibe Parsons playing Bernice in a cream-colored mink coat. Her few lines will remind you it’s the 70s, that’s for sure.

Alibe Parsons in a Mink Fur Coat - The Bitch, 1979

While that was happening, eagle eyes would notice Fontaine’s with someone carrying something exciting indeed. Thankfully, patience is rewarded, and Fontaine wears it when she arrives in London. We get our first glimpses of this enormous blue fox cape with a magnificent collar.

Joan Collins in a Blue Fox Fur Cape - The Bitch, 1979

Sadly, whoever was in charge of continuity really dropped the ball because she is out of it again a few minutes later. This entire airport sequence feels like most of the film’s first act. She meets up with someone far less spectacularly dressed. This is Carolyn Seymour in a pretty basic mink coat. She’s playing Polly Logan, who is there for 2 reasons, to tell us Fontaine’s disco is in trouble and to bring along her chauffeur.

Carolyn Seymour in a Mink Fur Coat - The Bitch, 1979

We get a shot of them together in their furs in the back of the Rolls. Fontaine expenses a particular interest in the chauffeur. Oh my, I wonder where this is going?

Carolyn Seymour in a Mink Fur Coat and Joan Collins in a Blue Fox Fur Cape - The Bitch, 1979

Exactly where you think it is for a 70s softcore drama. She seduces the chauffeur with a bit of help from her fabulous blue fox cape. Keep in mind this entire six to eight minutes of the film is entirely unrelated to the plot, such as it is. Not that I’m complaining.

Blink, and you will miss a shot of Fontaine in the back of the Rolls with a silver fox stole.

Joan Collins with a Silver Fox Fur Stole - The Bitch, 1979

Fontaine and Nico’s romance, such as it is, unfolds. Nico used her to smuggle a fake gem out of New York. That leads to… oh, yes? No one cares? Right. Moving on. More importantly, we learn Fontaine Khaled has an affinity for big fox fur capes. This one looks to be a marble fox.

Joan Collins in a Marble Fox Fur Cape - The Bitch, 1979

Another blink and you will miss the shot of Fontaine exiting her flat with a black fox wrap.

Joan Collins in a Black Fox Fur Wrap - The Bitch, 1979

Nico and Fontaine have similar views on monogamy, so he has a bit of a fling with a lady sent by the mob. Pamela Salem, playing Lynn, is briefly seen in this fox jacket in a couple of shots.

Pamela Salem in a Fox Fur Jacket - The Bitch, 1979

They drift back together long enough for a much better shot of that marble fox fur cape. Lucky us.

Joan Collins in a Marble Fox Fur Cape - The Bitch, 1979

The film meanders into the third act as Nico and Fontaine visit the countryside to fix a little horse race. Fontaine arrives in style in a full-length lynx fur coat.

Joan Collins in a Lynx Fur Coat - The Bitch, 1979

She meets up with and hugs, Sue Lloyd, playing Vanessa Grant. Sue greets Fontaine in a red fox jacket.

You’re here for “Sue Lloyd in fur,” right? Because you’re gonna get a lot of that from here on out in the movie. Also, horse smooches.

Sue Lloyd in a Red Fox Fur Coat and Hat - The Bitch, 1979

Fontaine graces us with “one” more fur before the film is out. This raccoon fur jacket appears.

Joan Collins in a Racoon Fur Stroller - The Bitch, 1979

I posted about a possible fur coat continuity error with Christmas Vacation. I am 100% sure there’s a continuity error here. This sequence includes two shots, one inside the car, and one outside. Here’s Fontaine inside the car.

Joan Collins Smoking in a Racoon Fur Stroller - The Bitch, 1979

And here is a simple of the short cutaway shots from the exterior looking inside. This is an entirely different coat. I suspect the severe reflections on the windshield were shot on purpose when they realized just how different the two coats were because they fully interfered with a clear view of Fontaine.

Joan Collins in a Fur Stroller - The Bitch, 1979

This is what you’re reading this blog for, fur coat continuity errors:

So we arrive at the end. The big horse race. Sadly Fontaine chooses this one moment not to wear fur. We have to make it through with the Vanessa Grant character wearing a full-length coyote fur coat and hat. 

Sue Lloyd in a Coyote Fur Coat and Hat - The Bitch, 1979

In fairness, she does so throughout the entire sequence.

Sue Lloyd in a Coyote Fur Coat and Hat - The Bitch, 1979

And that is it. My main quibble is the lack of a good fur on Joan Collins at the end. But, overall, easily the best 70s fur film I have seen so far. I alluded to it earlier, but I think what we think of as 80s fur fashion was in full swing in the late 70s. This also lines up with the fact that it ended ‘early’, trailing off before the 80s ended. 

Fur Runtime: approx 10 minutes
Film Runtime: 89 minutes
On-Screen Fur Ratio: 11%

9 responses to “Furs on Film – The Bitch (1979)”

  1. […] Joan is actually here more for the ’70s than the ’80s. She pretty much nails it in The Bitch. I know, date-wise, that’s almost a technicality, but it’s still the […]

  2. […] The Bitch “helped to revive Joan Collins’ flagging career,” according to Wikipedia at least, where […]

  3. […] Fur Fashion Review: The Bitch, 1979 Fur Fashion Gallery & Clip: The Bitch, 1979 […]

  4. […] it is; this is the 100th review on this site. A review I debated, but I’ve done The Bitch at this point, so we’ve firmly crossed the soft-core event horizon. Arguably, there is more sex […]

  5. […] to the next 100 reviews, I suppose. Fair warning, there is no abundance of softcore flicks with lots of big fox furs, so you’ll have to make do with a lot of regular flicks with big fox furs. Like Factory Girl, a […]

  6. […] The Stud was the first of what might have been a trilogy, but, despite the success of the sequel (The Bitch), a third film was never made. Thus Forever Lulu remains the top 1980s film for fur […]

  7. […] Revisiting Funny Lady, which is a great fur fashion film, robbed of a spot in the 20% club thanks to a rather lengthy runtime. It clocks in at a solid 15%. While it does not get to join that illustrious club, it is a member of many others on the site: “period piece,” “critically panned,” and “sequel with more fur than the original.” That last one puts in the prestigious company like The Bitch. […]

  8. […] she visits the same furrier as Fontaine Khaled. That or sleeveless fox coats enjoyed a bit of popularity in the late ‘70s and early […]

  9. […] far as it is officially rated NC-17. Trust me, if you want an “adult movie” you can enjoy, try The Bitch instead, as ‘70s sleaze, it's less offensive. Here you just get rape and […]

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