Circle of Power (1981) Poster

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7/10
A Twisted movie I can vividly remember - Yvette Mimeaux is a B movie queen
ddeboer4 June 2006
I give this movie a high rating simply because it is good exploitation. I caught this on cable TV late at night in the 80s and I was shocked by it's demented story of abuse as group psychotherapy. I haven't been able to locate it ever since. It doesn't seem to be available anywhere. Yvette Mimeaux was also in another hard to find film made for TV and derived from "Jackson County Jail" called "Outside Chance". It's another trash exploitation film my mother and I caught on TV and couldn't stop laughing in disbelief. It is another hard to find movie and burned in my memory. "Outside Chance" is just a trashier and campier version of "Jackson County Jail". Yvette must be a B movie queen of the late 70s early 80s.
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6/10
Unintentionally comic
recluse229 March 2019
Warning: Spoilers
I had a laugh during some of the group encounter scenes. I laughed when the people beat the crap out of each other (they all deserved it). It was funny when the fat guy gets stripped naked, humiliated, put in the cage and fed pig slop. It was funny when the old drunk was put in a coffin and buried for a couple of minutes. I cheered when the ball-cutting group leader therapist lady was grabbed by the hero guy and threatened and held like a hostage. She deserved it. I did not get the ending. Why did him and the wife return to the grounds? I guess to show love for his fellow humans who experienced the same tough experience. A little sentimental. I would have preferred him and his wife walking off and not returning. The point ought to have been that the person (or people) who rebel and walk out are the winners, the leaders, and only they will receive a promotion. (But someone could sneak off and that wouldn't be deserving of a leadership position I guess. So who knows? I think for the others it could be treated as a learning experience, a breaking down of the ego, but the impressive person is the one who can take it and respond with gumption) I did see some positivity to the harsh treatment and breaking down of the participants so the couple's returning made a kind of sense). The movie felt too long. The acting was like a theater class.
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8/10
Disturbing, well-performed psychodrama
trfesok13 April 2007
The movie is indeed based on true events as depicted in the book, "Brainwash", by Gene Church. Church actually attended one of these "employee motivational weekends" in the late 60's. While some of the details were changed (the group leaders were of the same gender as the groups, rather than opposite, as in the film), the movie is pretty much right on.

The film is now dated -- such "motivation" is based on flawed psychological theory and would be regarded as abuse today -- but still a fascinating view , very well done on an obviously low budget. The cast performs quite well, particularly Yvette Mimieux and Leo Rossi as the ice cold "motivators" and especially Walter Olkewicsz in the challenging role of the fat guy with low self-esteem.

It's not for the weak of heart and can still shock, even now, but fans of psychological thrillers will definitely enjoy it. Never released on DVD, it'll be a challenge to dig up an old VHS tape.
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A bizarre, distressing B movie...definitely worth a look.
EyeAskance20 May 2005
Yvette Mimieux could easily give Dyanne Thorne's "Ilsa" character a run for the money as the steeley-eyed, procrustean head of a "progressive" corporate empire, who encourages a group of ambitious desk-jockeys to participate in a voluntary job enhancement program. With spouses in tow, they're shuttled-off to a desolate and heavily-staffed purlieu where they endure various emotional, physical, sexual, and psychological torments. This sadistic Pavlovian technique initially seems to have surprisingly positive results, until some in the group realize this as the result of shattered spirits.

CIRCLE OF POWER is a sadly neglected gem, especially intriguing for its allegedly true accounts. Savage, unique...and surely in wait for a cult audience.

7/10....exceptional, and not easily forgotten.
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8/10
Yvette Mimieux Has The Power
TheFearmakers13 January 2024
Mostly known by the a more dramatic title CIRCLE OF POWER, which probably made the video rental more of a shelf-grabber, this early-80's cult curio titled BRAINWASH is based on the previous decade's self-help Erhard Seminars Training aka EST, where a group of participants are stuck inside a room, sometimes for days, without even a bathroom, under intense scrutiny by a charismatic leader for individual inner-self discovery, or something...

But in the Reagan-era, Hollywood saw fit to make Yvette Mimieux's gorgeous forty-something Bianca Ray a corporate tycoon (owner of a gigantic advertising firm) rather than hippie-guru, programming a handful of married couples not into personal-fulfillment but to become high-paid executives, and, halfway through... in a televised interview the group watches during a much needed break... she mentions how the current American leader wants her in his cabinet...

Her program separating husbands and wives into mostly vacant rooms except chairs in a semi-circle where the empty space in-between's calledThe Pit: first working on an extremely overweight Walter Olkewicz, who goes through more of a mental and physical ringer (fully nude and thrown into a cage) than anyone else... then intensely bonding with Yvette while some of the other men's conversions occur in a rushed montage...

Curbed by our central heroes in married-couple Christopher Allport -- who Mimieux partially seduces in a standout sequence after questioning why his mousy-cute, put-upon yet surprisingly and surreptitiously assertive wife Cindy Pickett was abused in her own group (by swarthy co-leader John Considine)...

Meanwhile his male cohorts, including Tony Plana, Leo Rossi and Carmen Argenziano... bullied not only by Yvette but muscular henchman Denny Miller (and Terence Knox)... eventually become rabid followers, ferociously set against the doubtful Allport in a suspenseful exploitation that ultimately seems like half a movie, and, with a group of black employees providing passive roman chorus outside, the compound isn't as ominous (or claustrophobic) to make this edgy psychological drama an all-out uncompromising thriller...

So other than some nudity and swearing, BRAINWASH feels more like an no-holds made-for-television movie than a toned-down theatrical feature and yet, either way, Yvette Mimieux hasn't looked this fantastic since the 1960's, trading in a horrendously plain BLACK HOLE perm-haircut with her (signature) flowing blonde mane... while her performance could have warranted an Oscar nomination -- and Walter Olkewicz as well.
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Compelling allegedly true psychodrama.
Infofreak12 May 2002
'Brainwash', purported to be factual, is a fascinating look at a group of white collar co-workers who sign up for a retreat that is supposed to involve an executive training course run by their boss Yvette Mimieux ('The Time Machine'). What it turns out to be is group humiliation, abuse and torture. The workers, who include overweight Buddy (Walter Olkewicz - 'Fire Walk With Me') and the pushy Chris (b-grade legend Leo Rossi), react in various ways to the forced psychodramas. The only real rebels are the cagey Jack (Christopher Allport - 'To Live And Die in L.A.') and his incredulous wife Lyn (Cindy Pickett - Ferris Bueller's mother). Caught between the seemingly insane methods of their captors, and the mounting peer pressure of their "enlightened" friends, they become increasingly desperate to escape.

This is a compelling and involving look at the more extreme aspects of the corporate and motivational mentality. While I really don't know how much of the movie is actually true, it wouldn't surprise me to learn that it is 100% accurate. 'Brainwash' may be obscure and close to forgotten now, but I recommend it to anyone that can find a copy. A very interesting movie this!
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