"War Is Good Business. Invest Your Son." The son of original "Forty Thieves" promoter S. S. Millard (1927's Is Your Daughter Safe?), San Francisco-based smut sorcerer Nick Millard (Criminally Insane) churned out this early (1967) example of the "crazy Vietnam vet" (aka "vetsploitation") theme that later motivated Canada's Naked Massacre (1976) and Shaun Costello's appalling Forced Entry (1973), among others. With Janice Kelly (Alice In Acidland) and a handful of sole credits. Featuring a topless shoe shine and jump cuts that rival Andy Warhol.