Violated Angels (犯された白衣,, Okasareta Hakui) is a film made by controversial Japanese director Kōji Wakamatsu in 1967.
Wakamatsu's most famous film,[1] it is based on the mass murder spree of Richard Speck in 1966.
[2][3][4] The film opens with a young man looking at pornographic magazines and practicing his shooting near the ocean.
The Head Nurse frantically begs for her life, even revealing that she lied about having a son, before tearfully accepting her death.
[4] The film was shot in black and white in just three days, probably much of it improvised and because of the low budget, many of the actresses were not professionals.
In Film As A Subversive Art, a book on underground cinema, Amos Vogel praises Wakamatsu's artistic talent, yet pans the film for its "...anti-feminist sadism which is not based on any ideological explanation and finally contributes misanthropic flavour to his work.