When a sadistic slasher begins his reign of terror in the alleys behind Los Angeles' strip clubs, the hottest stripper in town must walk a tightrope between her own fragile sanity and the mu... Read allWhen a sadistic slasher begins his reign of terror in the alleys behind Los Angeles' strip clubs, the hottest stripper in town must walk a tightrope between her own fragile sanity and the murderer's blade.When a sadistic slasher begins his reign of terror in the alleys behind Los Angeles' strip clubs, the hottest stripper in town must walk a tightrope between her own fragile sanity and the murderer's blade.
Jeannine Bisignano
- Sonny
- (as Jeanine Bisignano)
J Bartell
- Assistant coroner
- (as J. Bartel)
Paisley Yankolovich
- Mo
- (as Paisley)
Sandy Roth Ruben
- Ike's mom
- (as Sandy Ruben)
Curtis Fairchild
- Dream killer
- (uncredited)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured review
Plagued by strange dreams, a stripper in a seedy club starts a relationship with a detective investigating the series of murders occurring around the other residents of the stripclub she works at when it starts to appear she's acting out her dreams as the culprit forcing them to find the real killer.
This was a decent enough if somewhat problematic follow-up. The main feature that works here is the same factor that works well for the first one in that its sleaze trappings are incredibly fun and well-developed throughout. Featuring no shortage of high-end stripping scenes where neon-soaked dancers are put to the test with tightly choreographed sequences set to exotic jazz and saxophone-laden music creating an impressive visual involving the way the sequences come together. As this manages to incorporate a solid series of backstage interactions with the rest of the dancers who are engaging in the usual series of pettiness and jealousy expected in these kinds of features that involve changing or stripping down that manages to come across some solid nudity in that regard. As well, there's also a strong series of stalking scenes featuring the killer striking others around her. Since we've been given a great setup for this involving the hallucinations that paint her as the killer who's targeting her coworkers in stark black-and-white sequences featuring the striking imagery of the killer coming after them working well alongside the shocking concept of it all, there's a fine start here to the rest of the sequences here. The actual stalking scenes are incredibly rare and not nearly as involved but still manage to get some fun work out of the terrified nature of the victims in such a situation before the actual strike occurs which is usually accomplished by either razor slashes across the face or strangulation leading to a decent enough finale where everything comes together. These all give this a decent amount of positives although there are some pretty big issues with this one holding it back. Among the main flaws here is the excessively underwhelming and lazy storyline that tries too hard to put red herrings into this simple-minded murder mystery. With the way this tries to leverage doubt on the occasion by making her a potential suspect with the dreams being used to help intimate her as the culprit doing nothing more than throwing up a flashing sign saying this is a fake reading, it leaves only a few possible suspects who could be the main figure so this comes off somewhat underwhelming. There are also the film's obvious low-budget limitations here, not only the cheap gore and flimsy sets but also the exceptionally awkward stripping dances that are focused exclusively on the girls in isolated settings rather than in a fully-packed club of admirers so it feels a little cramped and low-budget, lowering this one overall.
Rated R: Nudity, Graphic Language, and Violence.
This was a decent enough if somewhat problematic follow-up. The main feature that works here is the same factor that works well for the first one in that its sleaze trappings are incredibly fun and well-developed throughout. Featuring no shortage of high-end stripping scenes where neon-soaked dancers are put to the test with tightly choreographed sequences set to exotic jazz and saxophone-laden music creating an impressive visual involving the way the sequences come together. As this manages to incorporate a solid series of backstage interactions with the rest of the dancers who are engaging in the usual series of pettiness and jealousy expected in these kinds of features that involve changing or stripping down that manages to come across some solid nudity in that regard. As well, there's also a strong series of stalking scenes featuring the killer striking others around her. Since we've been given a great setup for this involving the hallucinations that paint her as the killer who's targeting her coworkers in stark black-and-white sequences featuring the striking imagery of the killer coming after them working well alongside the shocking concept of it all, there's a fine start here to the rest of the sequences here. The actual stalking scenes are incredibly rare and not nearly as involved but still manage to get some fun work out of the terrified nature of the victims in such a situation before the actual strike occurs which is usually accomplished by either razor slashes across the face or strangulation leading to a decent enough finale where everything comes together. These all give this a decent amount of positives although there are some pretty big issues with this one holding it back. Among the main flaws here is the excessively underwhelming and lazy storyline that tries too hard to put red herrings into this simple-minded murder mystery. With the way this tries to leverage doubt on the occasion by making her a potential suspect with the dreams being used to help intimate her as the culprit doing nothing more than throwing up a flashing sign saying this is a fake reading, it leaves only a few possible suspects who could be the main figure so this comes off somewhat underwhelming. There are also the film's obvious low-budget limitations here, not only the cheap gore and flimsy sets but also the exceptionally awkward stripping dances that are focused exclusively on the girls in isolated settings rather than in a fully-packed club of admirers so it feels a little cramped and low-budget, lowering this one overall.
Rated R: Nudity, Graphic Language, and Violence.
- kannibalcorpsegrinder
- Mar 20, 2025
- Permalink
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaAs soon as director Katt Shea completed the stripper/vampire movie Dance of the Damned (1989), producer Roger Corman told Shea they had five days before they had to tear down the strip club set built for that movie and he didn't want to waste it. So he said he wanted her to film a sequel to her first film Stripped to Kill (1987) within that time. That meant Shea had to come up with a plot and cast the thing over a single weekend and rush into production. She said in an interview that it drove her insane. She was writing it as they went along. Then she threatened to take her name off of it after Corman kept telling her to "add more boobs" and re-edited everything (which she said he did on all the films she made for him). She's amazed when people tell her they love this movie because she has no idea why.
- GoofsWhen the computer gets a virus Decker states 95 shopping days till Christmas while the computer shows 93.
- ConnectionsEdited into Future Kick (1991)
- How long is Stripped to Kill 2: Live Girls?Powered by Alexa
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- Live Girls: Stripped to Kill II
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Top Gap
By what name was Stripped to Kill 2: Live Girls (1989) officially released in Canada in English?
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