His first feature, the nudist comedy
The Immoral Mr. Teas (1959), cost $24,000 to produce and eventually grossed more than $1,000,000 on the independent/exploitation circuit, ensconcing Meyer as "King of the Nudies." Over the next decade, he made nearly twenty movies with a trademark blend of warped humor, huge-breasted starlets and All-American sleaze, including such notable films as
Faster, Pussycat! Kill! Kill! (1965) and
Vixen! (1968). Russ Meyer was a true
auteur who wrote, directed, edited, photographed and distributed all his own films. He was able to finance each new film from the proceeds of the earlier ones, and became very wealthy in the process. And unlike many independent directors of his era he chose to cast actresses like
Shari Eubank or
Cynthia Myers who were considered extremely beautiful and wholesome.
Meyer's output can be divided into several eras. Earlier works like
The Immoral Mr. Teas, Eve and the Handyman, and the Western-themed
Wild Gals of the Naked West were stylistically similar to the "nudie-cutie" fare of the era, though separated from the pack by their superior color cinematography. 1964's
Lorna saw the ever economical director revert to black-and-white; with this change came a greater emphasis on storyline, almost theatrical violence, domineeringly psychosexual women, and their insipid male counterparts. The "
Gothic" period (as it was termed by Meyer) reached its apex with the commercially underwhelming
Faster, Pussycat! Kill! Kill!, which would eventually be reclaimed as a cult classic. It has a following all over the world and has inspired countless imitations,
music videos and tributes.
After producing the popular
mockumentary Mondo Topless (1966) with the remnants of his production company's assets and two mildly successful color melodramas, Meyer made headlines once again in 1968 with the controversial
Vixen!. Although its lesbian overtones are extremely tame by today's standards, the film -- designed by Meyer and longtime cohort Jim Ryan as a reaction to provocative European art films -- grossed millions on a five-figure budget and captured the zeitgeist just as
The Immoral Mr. Teas had a decade earlier. He followed it up with
Cherry, Harry & Raquel! (1970), which depended upon montages of the California landscape (replete with anti-
marijuana voiceovers) and
Uschi Digard dancing in the desert as the film's "lost soul."
This plot device was necessitated after the lead actress, Linda Ashton, left the shoot early and there was 20 minutes of footage needed to complete the film.
Reeling from the success of
Easy Rider and impressed by his thrifty attitude, 20th Century Fox signed Meyer to produce and direct a long-simmering proposed sequel to
Valley of the Dolls.
What eventually manifested was
Beyond the Valley of the Dolls(1970), scripted by film critic (and Meyer devotee)
Roger Ebert and bearing no relation to the novel or film's continuity (necessitated by a lawsuit involving
Jacqueline Susann). Many critics perceive the film as perhaps the greatest expression of his intentionally vapid surrealism — Meyer went so far as to refer to it as his definitive work in several interviews — others, such as
Variety, saw "BVD" "as funny as a burning orphanage and a treat for the emotionally retarded.". Contractually stipulated to produce an R-rated film, the brutally violent climax (depicting a decapitation) ensured an X rating. Though disowned by the studio for years to come and amid gripes from the director after he attempted to recut the film to include more titillating scenes after the ratings debacle, it still earned over $6 million domestically in the United States on a budget under $1 million.
After making his most subdued film, an adaptation of the popular
Irving Wallace novel
The Seven Minutes (1971), Meyer returned to
grindhouse-style cinema in 1973 with the
Blaxploitation period piece
Black Snake, which was dismissed by critics and audiences as incoherent. In 1975, he released
Supervixens, a return to the world of big bosoms, square jaws, and the Mojave desert that earned $17 million (American) on a shoestring budget. Meyer's theatrical career ended with the release of the surreal
Up! (1976) and 1979's
Beneath the Valley of the Ultra-Vixens, his most sexually graphic films. Film historians and fans have called these last three films "Bustoons" because Russ Meyer's usage of color and
Mise en scène recalled larger than life
pop art settings and
cartoonish characters.
Despite the fact that hardcore
pornographic films would overtake Meyer's softcore market share, he retired in the late 1970s a very wealthy man.