{{Short description|1970 British film by Michael Cort}} {{Use dmy dates|date=June 2016}} {{Use British English|date=June 2016}} {{Infobox film | name = Zeta One | image = "Zeta_One".jpg | alt = | caption = Italian poster | native_name = | director = Michael Cort | producer = George Maynard <br> Tony Tenser | writer = {{plainlist| * Michael Cort * Alistair McKenzie}} | screenplay = | story = | based_on = <!-- {{based on|title of the original work|writer of the original work}} --> | narrator = | starring = James Robertson Justice <br> Charles Hawtrey <br> Dawn Addams | music = Johnny Hawksworth | cinematography = Jack Atchelor | editing = {{plainlist| * Jack T. Knight * Dennis Lanning}} | studio = Tigon British Film Productions | distributor = Tigon Film Distributors | released = {{Film date|1970|10}} | runtime = 86 minutes | country = United Kingdom | language = English | budget = £60,000 | gross = }} '''''Zeta One''','' also known as '''''The Love Slaves''''', '''''Alien Women''''' and '''''The Love Factor''''', is a 1970 British comedy science fiction film directed by Michael Cort and starring James Robertson Justice, Charles Hawtrey and Dawn Addams.<ref name="BFIsearch">{{Cite web |title=Zeta One |url=https://collections-search.bfi.org.uk/web/Details/ChoiceFilmWorks/150339115 |access-date=4 December 2023 |website=British Film Institute Collections Search}}</ref> It was written by Cort and Alistair McKenzie, based on a comic strip short story in the magazine ''Zeta,''<ref name=":0">{{Cite book |last=Chibnall |first=Steve |title=British Science Fiction Cinema |publisher=Routledge |year=2006 |isbn=0415168686 |editor-last=Hunter |editor-first=I.Q. |pages=69 |chapter=Alien women: The politics of sexual difference in British SF pulp cinema}}</ref> and was produced by George Maynard and Tony Tenser for Tigon Films.

==Plot== James Word is a spy for Section 5 who finds a secretary from the section waiting when he returns home. As they play strip poker, he tells about tailing Major Bourdon, who was conducting an investigation into the women from Angvia. The Angvians are led by Zeta, and are an all-women secret society. The Angvians regularly abducted other planet's women into their ranks where they were brainwashed to become operatives. Their next target is stripper Edwina "Ted" Strain and Section 5 uses her to set a trap for them. As Bourdon's men take several of the Angvian agents prisoner, a final confrontation between the various parties occurs at his estate.

==Cast== * James Robertson Justice as Major Bourdon * Charles Hawtrey as Swyne * Robin Hawdon as James Word * Anna Gaël as Clotho * Brigitte Skay as Lachesis * Dawn Addams as Zeta * Valerie Leon as Atropos * Lionel Murton as 'W' * Yutte Stensgaard as Ann Olsen * Wendy Lingham as Ted (Edwina) * Rita Webb as clippie * Carol Hawkins as Zara * Steve Kirby as sleuth * Paul Baker as Bourdon's assistant * Walter Sparrow as stage manager * Alan Haywood as pilot * Anna Tunnard as Miss Johnson * Yolande Del Mar as striptease artiste * Rose Howlett as fat lady * Nita Lorraine as Angvia girl * Vikki Richards as Angvia girl * Angela Grant as Angvia girl * Kirsten Betts as Angvia girl

==Production== ''Zeta One'' was the first film shot at Camden Studios, formerly a wallpaper factory in North London.<ref name=":0" /> Art director Christopher Neame designed the film's sets. Location shooting took place around the city.

==Release== First screened to journalists in April 1969 to hostile reviews, the film sat on the shelf for 18 months before finally getting a UK release in October 1970, as the supporting feature to Kobi Jaegar's 1969 film ''Kama Sutra''.<ref>Sheridan, Simon: ''Saucy 70s'' Blu-ray Box Set booklet, 88 Films, 2022, p. 20.</ref>

It was released in America by Film Ventures International, briefly in 1973 as ''The Love Slaves'' and then wider in 1974 under the titles ''Alien Women'' and ''The Love Factor''.<ref>Stanley, J. (2000) Creature Feature: Third Edition</ref> It was released as a Blu-ray DVD in 2013.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Zeta One Blu-ray (The Love Factor) |url=https://www.blu-ray.com/movies/Zeta-One-Blu-ray/62160/#Review |access-date=2024-02-06 |website=blu-ray.com}}</ref>

==Critical reception== In ''The Monthly Film Bulletin'' David McGillivray wrote: "The picture-stories for adults in the ill-fated magazine ''Zeta'' were an imaginative experiment, but this adaptation of one of them blunts its satire and magnifies its quite preposterous illogicality and silliness. In fact, the treatment would render the film suitable only for Saturday morning audiences were it not for the glut of stark and near-naked girls that cavort incessantly through the hurriedly improvised settings. It is difficult to understand how James Robertson Justice and Dawn Addams came to be involved in such a project unless they were unaware of the banal treatment in store for the script."<ref>{{Cite journal |date=1971 |title=Zeta One |url=https://www.proquest.com/docview/1305829296 |journal=The Monthly Film Bulletin |volume=38 |issue=444 |pages=62 |id={{ProQuest|1305829296}}}}</ref>

''Kine Weekly'' wrote: "This is a light skit on special agents and science fiction that should please the undemanding. &nbsp;... The plot is introduced very slowly with a lot of talk, but improves once it gets going in the fantastic world of the Angvians, who, judging by their costumes, enjoy perfect central heating. Probability is a scarcity in the story: the touches of humour are obvious but amusing and some of the sequences are more than a little silly; but, generally speaking, it is fairly entertaining nonsense on a small scale. Robin Hawdon is a bland James Word; James Robertson Justice gives his usual, large performance as the wicked Col. Bourdon, and the main Angyian seductions are represented by Anna Gael and Yutte Stensgaard, with guest star Dawn Addams appearing as the Angvian queen bee."<ref>{{Cite journal |date=18 April 1970 |title=Zeta One |url=https://www.proquest.com/docview/2600861610 |journal=Kine Weekly |volume=633 |issue=3262 |pages=10 |id={{ProQuest|2600861610}}}}</ref>

In ''British Science Fiction Cinema'' Steve Chibnall called the film "a bizarre psychedelic concoction of sexploitation and feminist fable and a high-point of British cinema's flirtation with weirdness in the late 1960s," adding: "A critical and commercial failure on its release, ''Zeta One'' is easy to dismiss as a piece of crazed nonsense, but its significance lies in its eroticisation of collective feminist ambitions and its joyful welcome of a sexually rapacious matriarchy."<ref name=":0" />

''Moria Reviews'' noted it is an odd mix of the James Bond type movies with a sex comedy.<ref>{{Cite web |date=16 March 2016 |title=Zeta One (1969) |url=http://www.moriareviews.com/sciencefiction/zeta-one-1969.htm |access-date=4 December 2023 |website=Moria Reviews}}</ref>

==References== <references/>

==External links== * {{IMDb title|0065243}}

Category:1970 comedy films Category:1970 films Category:1970 science fiction films Category:1970 English-language films Category:1970s science fiction comedy films Category:British science fiction comedy films Category:English-language action adventure films Category:English-language science fiction comedy films Category:Films shot in London Category:Parody films based on James Bond films Category:Tigon British Film Productions films Category:British sex comedy films