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Botched fantasy
The pornographers thought they were being clever, but this convoluted fantasy of a womanizer getting his hellish comeuppance is so sloppily written and directed that it becomes embarrassing. One is led to the conclusion that they thought the sex would justify everything to fans brainwashed into believing that sex is the only element that matters.
Horner plays a publisher who is criticized by his employee Peter North for taking advantage of women and having no scruples. Horner takes home a new proofreader he's hired (Tiffany Mynx) and has sex with her. Next morning when he wakes up, she's gone and he's thrust suddenly (with no explanation offered then or even at film's end) into a nighmarish fantasy that makes no sense. Anthony Crane, overacting ridiculously while affecting a silly voice, plays a porn director who likens himself to of all people, the great silent director Erich von Stroheim, and starts pushing a befuddled Horner around.
He's directing a porno biopic based on Horner's life, just his sexual escapades. Horner can't believe it (nor could I) but North appears now as an actor playing Horner's role and various beauties portray Horner's sexual conquests.
It's all an excuse for a series of sex scenes, culminating improbably/stupidly with Crane enlisting a bewildered Horner to play himself having sex with one of the Adult actresses. The movie's ending is meaningless, lending a shaggy-dog tale aspect to the entire mess.
So we're left with sexy babes like Mynx, Kaitlyn Ashley and Krista doing their XXX thing and little else. The film-within-a-film structure is clumsy rather than clever.
Sloppiness has the end credits exchanging the characters played by Anthony Crane and Jay Ashley, as if the filmmakers couldn't tell the two apart!
Horner plays a publisher who is criticized by his employee Peter North for taking advantage of women and having no scruples. Horner takes home a new proofreader he's hired (Tiffany Mynx) and has sex with her. Next morning when he wakes up, she's gone and he's thrust suddenly (with no explanation offered then or even at film's end) into a nighmarish fantasy that makes no sense. Anthony Crane, overacting ridiculously while affecting a silly voice, plays a porn director who likens himself to of all people, the great silent director Erich von Stroheim, and starts pushing a befuddled Horner around.
He's directing a porno biopic based on Horner's life, just his sexual escapades. Horner can't believe it (nor could I) but North appears now as an actor playing Horner's role and various beauties portray Horner's sexual conquests.
It's all an excuse for a series of sex scenes, culminating improbably/stupidly with Crane enlisting a bewildered Horner to play himself having sex with one of the Adult actresses. The movie's ending is meaningless, lending a shaggy-dog tale aspect to the entire mess.
So we're left with sexy babes like Mynx, Kaitlyn Ashley and Krista doing their XXX thing and little else. The film-within-a-film structure is clumsy rather than clever.
Sloppiness has the end credits exchanging the characters played by Anthony Crane and Jay Ashley, as if the filmmakers couldn't tell the two apart!
helpful•10
- lor_
- Jan 10, 2024
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- Runtime1 hour 15 minutes
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