---
product_id: 6350144
title: "Big Doll House [DVD]"
brand: "judith m. brownroberta collinsjack hill"
price: "¥3440"
currency: JPY
in_stock: true
reviews_count: 13
url: https://www.desertcart.jp/products/6350144-big-doll-house-dvd
store_origin: JP
region: Japan
---

# Includes bonus features 3-story design For ages 3+ Big Doll House [DVD]

**Brand:** judith m. brownroberta collinsjack hill
**Price:** ¥3440
**Availability:** ✅ In Stock

## Summary

> 🏰 Build Memories, One Room at a Time!

## Quick Answers

- **What is this?** Big Doll House [DVD] by judith m. brownroberta collinsjack hill
- **How much does it cost?** ¥3440 with free shipping
- **Is it available?** Yes, in stock and ready to ship
- **Where can I buy it?** [www.desertcart.jp](https://www.desertcart.jp/products/6350144-big-doll-house-dvd)

## Best For

- judith m. brownroberta collinsjack hill enthusiasts

## Why This Product

- Trusted judith m. brownroberta collinsjack hill brand quality
- Free international shipping included
- Worldwide delivery with tracking
- 15-day hassle-free returns

## Key Features

- • **🌟 Safe & Durable!:** Crafted from high-quality materials, ensuring hours of safe play for your little ones.
- • **🎬 Bonus Content Galore!:** Enjoy exclusive behind-the-scenes footage and fun activities on the DVD.
- • **🏡 Dream Big, Play Bigger!:** Unleash your child's imagination with this expansive 3-story dollhouse.
- • **🛋️ Fully Furnished Fun!:** Comes with stylish furniture and accessories to create endless stories.
- • **👩‍👧‍👦 Family Bonding Time!:** Perfect for interactive playdates, fostering creativity and social skills.

## Overview

The Big Doll House DVD features a beautifully designed 3-story dollhouse that includes a variety of furniture and accessories, perfect for children aged 3 and up. The accompanying DVD offers bonus content that enhances playtime, making it a fantastic choice for family bonding and imaginative play.

## Description

Big Doll House [DVD]

## Images

![Big Doll House [DVD] - Image 1](https://m.media-amazon.com/images/I/51QG6P5TADL.jpg)

## Customer Reviews

### ⭐⭐⭐⭐ 







  
  
    "Search them...inside and out!"
  

*by C***8 on Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on February 2, 2006*

In the late 1960s actor/producer John Ashley, initially famous for appearing in a number of JD flicks, hooked up with writer/director/producer Eddie Romero in the Philippines to crank out a handful of inexpensive (i.e.cheapo), somewhat successful horror features.  Always an eye towards the frugal, producer/director/writer Roger Corman jumped on the bandwagon in the early 1970s, teaming up with the pair to release his second feature under his newly formed `New World' (later to be known as Concorde) film group, a chicks in chains flick titled The Big Doll House (1971).  Directed by Jack Hill (Spider Baby, The Big Bird Cage, Switchblade Sisters), the film features Judith M. Brown (Willie Dynamite), Roberta Collins (Women in Cages, Caged Heat), Brooke Mills (The Student Teachers), Pat Woodell (The Twilight People), and Pam Grier (Coffy, Foxy Brown), in her first major role.  Also appearing is Christiane Schmidtmer (The Giant Spider Invasion), Kathryn Loder (Foxy Brown), Jerry Frank (Voodoo Island), and Sid `tall, bald and bearded' Haig (Spider Baby, Diamonds Are Forever).The film starts out with the arrival of three new inmates at some podunk, backwater, women's prison located in the Philippines, I'm guessing, given the large number of Philippino extras running around.  As the women are processed (full body cavity searches for everyone!) we meet Collier (Brown), one of the three prisoners, along with a butcher than butch head guard named Lucian (Loder).  After this we get to meet Collier's new cellmates, and they're quite the assortment...there's Grear (Grier), who got tossed in the pokey for hustling and has a real hate/hate complex towards men, Bodine (Woodell), a political prisoner whose boyfriend is a rebel insurgent leader hiding out in the hills, Harrad (Mills), a weird junkie type with pyromaniac tendencies, incarcerated for killing her baby (that's lovely), a blondie named Alcott (Collins), and so on...life is difficult in the prison, as the days are filled with tedium labor either toiling in excessively muddy fields or weaving baskets, while the nights involve entertaining oneself with cockroach races, shankings, snitching on your cellmates, or spending time in Lucian's private chamber of sadomasochistic delights.  As the film progresses we witness scenes of torture, a gratuitous and pointless shower sequence, more torture, talk of escape, a food fight, a mysterious figure in a hood overseeing the torture, a catfight that devolves into a fine display of mud wrestling, time outs in the hot box, electroshock therapy, snakes, and fun and games with Harry (Haig) and his new partner Fred (Frank), a pair of entrepreneurs who sell food, smokes, and what not to the prisoners (don't worry if you don't have the cash, as Harry will let you slide for a good groping), fantasizing about all the man hungry flesh locked behind the bars.  Tired of being used and abused, a core group of girls plan an elaborate escape attempt, one that involves kidnapping the head mistress named Miss Dietrich (Schmidtmer).What The Big Doll House lacks in aspects like cohesive story, good acting, and solid characters it more than makes up for in unmitigated sleazy fun.  One thing that did surprise me a little was the fact there wasn't as much nekkidness in this movie as I would have expected.  Oh, there was a decent amount, most all topless shots, a lot limited to flashes of flesh soon to be obscured by an arm, or someone turning their back towards the camera.  This didn't bother me because what there was, was pretty nice (hello Ms. Grier...nice to see you and the twins).  What was most notable was the complete absence of any Sapphic action.  It was often alluded to in the story, but the film never delivered the goods (I wasn't looking for any hardcore dueling batwing action, but a little face suckage and copious fondling would have been nice).  The plot is of the loosey goosey variety, meaning this is more or less an assemblage of sleaze soaked sequences eventually leading up to the big escape attempt.  This was pretty much what I was expecting, as director Hill obviously knew enough to avoid attempting the premise of serious, social commentary in an effort to cover up the exploitive nature of the material, as was done in Corman's earlier film The Student Nurses (1970), which tried to conceal its lurid and skeezy nature by touching awkwardly upon a slew of feminine issues.  While the characters themselves were of the garden-variety stock one would normally expect in a feature like this, some of the performances did stand out.  Pam Grier makes one helluva butch prisoner, and I thought Haig's character just a whole lot of fun.  Loder's character of Lucian, the sadistic, snake loving head guard was decent, but I only wish she would have turned it up a notch or two, as there was certainly room to do so...and check out the various native to the region extras in the prison...looks like they were recruited off the streets, having little idea what was actually going on...the last half of this film could have been titled `The Misadventures of Harry and Fred', as the pair play a more prominent role in the story, becoming entangled in the escape attempt as the women use the lure of hot prison lovin' to get the pair of knuckleheads to unwittingly help them in their plans, culminating in a sequence where the two end up in their underwear, forced at gunpoint to engage some naughty fun in the back of their truck in a twisted effort by the escapees to return some of the humiliation and degradation heaped upon them by their once captors.  To say anymore would spoil things, so I'll leave it at that...overall, The Big Doll House was generally what I expected, an entertaining film packed with good, wholesome, scuzzy fun.  This film was followed up a year later by one titled The Big Bird Cage (1972), which also featured Grier, and was written and directed by Jack Hill.The fullscreen (1.33:1) picture quality on this DVD release is decent, and the Dolby Digital audio comes through well.  As far as special features, there's cast and crew biographies, an original theatrical trailer, and a five minute interview piece between Leonard Maltin and Roger Corman where the two talk about this film like it was some form of high art.  Corman also claims he decided to make this film in the Philippines because he thought he could get more for his money, but I think it was really just an effort to keep more dough in his pocket rather than spend what he saved on better production values.  Also included are previews for the films Death Race 2000 (1975), Grand Theft Auto (1977), Eat My Dust (1976), Big Bad Mama (1974), and Humanoids from the Deep (1980), all recently re-issued onto DVD by Walt Disney Video, which, within the past year, acquired the release rights to Corman's extensive Concorde-New Horizons catalog of films.Cookieman108If I learned anything from this film, it's that if you ever find yourself in prison, avoid, if at all possible, sharing a cell with a junkie.

### ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ 







  
  
    It is a hell of a drive-in movie and the best WIP (Women in Prison) movie ever made
  

*by J***S on Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on October 20, 2016*

Five stars is deceptive because one can only give Tokyo Story and La Règle du jeu five stars as well. The Big Doll House isn't a masterpiece of world cinema. It is a hell of a drive-in movie and the best WIP (Women in Prison) movie ever made. Jack Hill knew how to tell a story, and build to an action-packed climax, and he elicited strong performances from a cast comprised of Cult Movie Sirens and Cult Movie Siren wannabes. I love that Queen of the Bs Pam Grier sings the title song, which, of course, Tarantino would rip off years later in Jackie Brown! My favorite performance in the film is by Roberta Collins, who graced many a 1970s Drive-In Exploitation film. A close second would be Pat Woodell of Petticoat Junction lore. And let us not forget Jack Hill perennial Sid Haig, and the lovely Ms. Judith Brown and Ms. Brooke Mills. I consider all of these women to be cinematic pioneers, working on location in the Philippines for peanuts, giving their all, and carving out new identities for women on screen. Yes The Big Doll House is exploitation, but it's also about autonomous women who will fight for each other and a cause.

### ⭐ 







  
  
    No Closed Captions  :-(  I returned it.
  

*by J***M on Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on April 20, 2023*

No Closed Captions so I returned it for refund.

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*Product available on Desertcart Japan*
*Store origin: JP*
*Last updated: 2026-04-27*