Ebony, Ivory & Jade
Ebony, Ivory & Jade | |
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Directed by | Cirio Santiago |
Starring | Rosanne Katon Colleen Camp Sylvia Anderson |
Distributed by | Dimension Pictures |
Release date | 1976 |
Ebony, Ivory & Jade is a 1976 film by director Cirio Santiago, made in Manila, Philippines. A relatively well-budgeted martial arts feature by Santiago's standards, the film was seen mainly in US drive-in movies, where it was first released as She-Devils in Chains. It has also been released as American Beauty Hostages, Foxfire, and Foxforce.
Five female athletes are kidnapped during an international track meet in "Hong Kong," then fight their way to freedom after being recaptured several times. Considered a minor classic of the blaxploitation genre, Ebony, Ivory & Jade stars Rosanne Katon as track star Pam Rogers, the eponymous 'Ebony' of the title. Colleen Camp co-stars as Ginger 'Ivory' Douglas, her privileged track and field rival. Sylvia Anderson (an American actress, not the British actress/writer/producer of the same name) appears as Jackie, aka 'Jade.'
Unrelated to the 1980 TV-movie pilot starring Debbie Allen, Martha Smith and Bert Convy.
Admired by director Quentin Tarantino, the film is referenced in Pulp Fiction by Uma Thurman's character, who speaks about her role in an unsuccessful television series called "Fox Force Five"[citation needed]. The trailer for the film also used the phrase "roaring rampage of revenge", a phrase used to describe Kill Bill Vol.1 and referred to in the opening of Kill Bill Vol.2.