Country Cuzzins was produced by Harry H. Novak and written/directed by Bethel Buckalew. It was released by Pure Gold Productions in 1972.

Notable Cast

Rene Bond

Billie Jo

Pamela Princess

Jenny Peabody

John Tull

Leroy Peabody

Ellen Stephens

Cousin Prudence

George “Buck” Flower

Walter Wimpy

Debbie Osborne

Party Guest

Country Cuzzins from 1972 is a raunchy softcore film from producer Harry H. Novak (Secret Sex Lives of Romeo and Juliet, Tobacco Roody, The Pig Keeper’s Daughter, etc) and writer/director Bethel Buckalew (Dirty Mind of Young Sally, Midnight Plowboy, Southern Comforts, etc). While tame by today’s standards in terms of simulated sexual content since it is about as wild as an episode of Grey’s Anatomy, there is a ton of nudity on screen, which is primarily the reason for the X-rated designation.

In the film, a mixed family of rich city folk and country folk get together because Grandma Peabody is not long for this world. As country mixes with city, shenanigans ensue and clothes are shed left and right. After a large amount of moonshine, Aunt Prudence invites the country-folk to her place in the city. Worried they will embarass her and all of her fancy city friends, she throws a costume party where the city folk dress as bumpkins while the country folk show up in city garb for a role-reversal.

From there, more sexy shenanigans happen, with Billie Jo (Rene Bond) seduced by a lecherous uncle who promises her a recording contract. She turns the tables on him, though, as she seduces him into a heart attack. And, even though he has passed from this world, everything ends up happily ever after, even if Billie Jo did not get her chance to become a singer in the big city.

It is a bit of harmless fun, and while the incestuous nature of the title is suspect, it is also mostly a rather innocent flick. If you have a hankering for beautiful naked women running around a farm with shaky-I-wish-they-had-a-stedicam handheld cinematography, then this is the movie for you. Also, The Pig Keeper’s Daughter (1972) is also most likely a movie for you since it was filmed on the same farm.