| Features:
 
 ColorClosed-captionedWidescreen
 
 Description:
 
 In the opening minutes of Coffy, Pam Grier's star-making role,  she blasts the skull of a sleazy drug pusher into pulp like a watermelon and  shoots his junkie assistant with an overdose of heroin. Jack Hill knows how to  open a movie, and he never lets up on the down-and-dirty action. Coffy is an  emergency room nurse by day and vigilante by night, targeting the dealers who  made her sister a comatose junkie. She works her way up to the Italian mobsters  muscling into the ghetto drug trade while she's romanced by glib, smooth-talking  politician Booker Bradshaw and wooed by nice-guy cop William Elliot, whose  refusal to sell out to the corrupt force earns him a crippling  beating.
 There's plenty of sex, a catty girl-fight that leaves the losers  topless, and car chases and shootouts galore, but what makes Coffy a  blaxploitation classic is Grier's Amazonian presence and fiery charisma, and the  gritty, low-budget action scenes marked by visceral, wincing violence. Mob  strong-arm Sid Haig (Spider Baby) cackles while dragging his victim (a  strutting peacock pimp played by Nashville's Robert DoQui) behind a  speeding car in a sadistic lynching, and Grier runs down one bad guy with a  speeding car and takes care of another with a shotgun to the groin. Hill had  previously directed Grier in The Big Doll House and The Big Bird  Cage. Their next and last picture together, Foxy Brown, was  originally written as the sequel to Coffy. --Sean Axmaker
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