History of Sex in Cinema: 1995, Part 1 |
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Angels and Insects (1995, US/UK) Director/co-scripter Philip Haas' controversial, visually-striking costume drama, an adaptation of A. S. Byatt's novella titled Morpho Eugenia, was set in Victorian England. The film was the first to be slapped with an NC-17 rating (later released unrated or R) for one brief scene of male genital nudity (with a semi-erection). It occurred when actor Douglas Henshall left the bed of a woman and pulled on his pants with his penis remaining semi-stiff. It was the tale of lower-class, penniless entomologist-naturalist William Adamson (Mark Rylance) who had returned (after a decade) in 1858 from the Amazon in South America with an invitation to reside with his high-class wealthy patron-benefactor - a gentrified country minister and amateur insect collector named Sir Harald Alabaster (Jeremy Kemp), his fat wife Lady Alabaster (Annette Badland) and his large family of seven girls and one son. Shipwrecked, he was able to bring back the only thing saved -- a rare species of butterfly, the Morpho Eugenia. Inevitably, although he was an outsider to the world of privilege, William fell in love with Alabaster's lovely, other-worldly, and enigmatic eldest daughter Eugenia (Patsy Kensit), drawn to her like a moth to light, although she was entirely in a different social stratus. William wooed her into marriage at the same time that a younger sister became engaged. The only opposition to the marriage, presumably for class reasons, was from Eugenia's wastrel, spoiled brother Edgar Alabaster (Douglas Henshall), the estate's heir ("You are under-bred, sir, and you are no good match for my sister. There is bad blood in you, vulgar blood"). It was unusual that the five quickly-produced offspring of their marriage looked nothing like William. At the same time that Eugenia was withdrawing her affections, gentlemanly William partnered with his poor but talented artist/writer , a governess to the younger Alabaster children. They worked together on an ant colony research project taking many months - she was much wittier and smarter than William's wife (causing Eugenia jealousy and dissatisfaction).
The story's revelation by the conclusion involved the dark, hidden, and shocking sexually-transgressive secret of incest (an anagram of insect!) between deceitful Eugenia and her perverted brother Edgar, who was also promiscuous with young female servants. William left to return to the Amazon, accompanied by Matty. |
Eugenia (Patsy Kensit) |
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Beyond the Clouds (1995, Fr./It./Ger.) (aka Al di là delle nuvole, or Par-Delà Les Nuages) This multi-part drama (by elderly, speech-impaired 83 year-old master Italian director Michelangelo Antonioni with German/Dutch co-director Wim Wenders) was an artsy, erotic, puzzling and pretentious group of four interconnected vignettes or short stories (based on Antonioni's own book "That Bowling Alley on the Tiber"). Each one was about the romantic obsession of male-female relationships between strangers coming together under chance circumstances, with plentiful female nudity. It was a box-office hit in Europe, but made little impact in the US. The film was set up by having a wrap-around device to frame the stories. John Malkovich (as a wandering, imaginative American film director akin to Antonioni), was searching for locales for stories and filming. He pretentiously spoke:
The First Story: "Story of a Love Affair That Never Existed" The film's couple had a chance meeting in a small Italian town of Ferrara at a hotel where they were both staying - they were city water pump technician Silvano (Kim Rossi-Stuart) and slender, beautiful schoolteacher Carmen (Ines Sastre). She waited for him in her room, but he fell asleep while waiting for the right moment. Then the two reconnected three years later after they ran into each other at the cinema. They had a non-touching 'perfect' and unconsummated sexual encounter. Silvano moved his hand tantalizingly over willing Carmen's naked chest, especially over her too-perfect breasts - without physically touching her and then inexplicably left her apartment (with her lying in only her panties and physically untarnished on the bed) without following through on their mutual attraction.
The Second Story: "The Girl, the Crime..." The director met a shapely seaside Portofino shop clerk credited as The Girl (Sophie Marceau), stalked her through narrow alleyways, and then made love to her in his hotel room as the murderess (although acquitted) admitted that she stabbed her father to death 12 times. The Third Story: "The Wheel" and "Don't Try to Find Me," Set in Paris, it was about married New Yorker Roberto (Peter Weller) caught in a three-year relationship between his drunken wife Patricia (Fanny Ardant) and his Italian mistress Olga (Chiara Caselli) whom he met in a cafe. |
The Second Story with The Girl (Sophie Marceau) The Third Story with Olga (Chiara Caselli) |
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Black Day Blue Night (1995) Released only on VHS-tape in the US (although via DVD in other countries), this neo-noirish crime-thriller about robbery, deceit, murder, and sex suffered from limited distribution and low-budget production. Writer/director J.S. Cardone's film came in the wake of Quentin Tarantino's Pulp Fiction (1994), and was very similar in many ways to Thelma & Louise (1991) and Red Rock West (1993). The title-credits sequence was a foreshadowing of the film's plot - a tarantula was briefly upended onto its back on a desolate road by the strong draft created by an unmarked Chevrolet police cruiser that drove over it while speeding across the desert. The creature righted itself and continued on its way. In the opening sequence, investigative cop Lt. John Quinn (J.T. Walsh) from Provo, Utah drove up to an accident-crash site where a robbery getaway car (with two of the three robbery suspects were dead) fleeing from Provo had struck and killed a cow in the road and turned over. A dislodged, opened suitcase had scattered cash over the landscape - the closest town was Hanksville, Utah about 20 miles further south in southern Utah. Another police trooper noted about the scene of carnage:
At the same time, at the Desert Sands Motel in Hanksville, armed and disgruntled Hallie "Hal" Schrag (Mia Sara) shot her way through one of the motel doors where she came upon her creepy, abusive and unfaithful husband Bo Schrag (Tim Guinee) having sex with an attractive, profanity-spewing, short-haired, butch-like bottle-blonde Rinda Wooley (Michelle Forbes). With her gun aimed at him, Hallie threatened: "I'm gonna kill you, Bo!" Rinda was shocked that the local stud Bo, an inveterate liar, hadn't informed her that he was married:
After this encounter, Rinda impulsively quit her part-time, greasy spoon fry-cook job in the Hop Chung Cafe, a nearby Hanksville roadside eatery (run by a Chinese couple named Hop Chung and Fat Mama) after demanding her final one week's pay. Hallie met up with her in the parking lot, told her: "I didn't shoot him," and asked for a ride: "It's the least you could do after you f--ked my husband." The two wronged and allied females went for a road trip in her dilapidated red Cadillac convertible toward Phoenix, enroute to California. Their route took them south from Hanksville to Mexican Hat, Utah and toward the north-eastern Arizona border line, and eventually to the town of Kayenta, AZ. During a thunderstorm, when they stopped to put up the top, the car became mired in mud. They had their first spooky encounter with side-burned drifter-hitchhiker Dodge (Gil Bellows) who vainly asked for a ride. After sleeping overnight in the car, the next morning at the adjacent Wellton Cafe, Rinda told just-awakened Hallie that Dodge had helped rescue their car from the mud, and as a reward, she had offered him breakfast - and a lift. They noticed that he was clinging to a dilapidated suitcase. In a parallel storyline, the pursuit was on for the sole surviving member of a trio of masked armored-truck robbers. The case was being supervised by Provo Police Chief Morris Reed (John Beck). At the crash site, after the $2 million heist, the criminals had shot and killed a retired policeman, Lt. Quinn's partner Vern Pender according to the Provo Tribune. The only surviving criminal still-at-large, identified as a male, was presumably hitchhiking and carrying a suitcase with the cash. More than $1 million dollars was still missing, and some of it was traceable, while about $900,000 of the haul had been recovered after it was scattered by the wind at the getaway car crash site. Lt. Quinn was doggedly tracking Rinda's convertible, looking for the "hitchhiker" as her open Cadillac drove south and crossed over into Arizona. Lt. Quinn was alerted to the threesome's location after a Navajo Man (Thomas Redhouse), the Bard Store gas-station owner in southern Utah near the border, reported that a female (Rinda) with "yellow hair, angry eyes, like a coyote" bought $20 dollars worth of gas (for a "big red Cadillac") with one of the stolen marked bills. The trio of drifters ended up in a secluded place called "Paradise" by Dodge. It was across the border in NW Arizona close to the small town of Kayenta, far off the main road. Along with a beautiful lake, there was a spring-fed desert hot mineral springs located in a remote canyon. There under the stars and around a campfire, the trio shared stories of their difficult childhoods and other wild tales. Hallie expressed a fear of hers: "I'm out here in the middle of God-knows-where with a couple of total strangers... I could get raped, killed, no one would know." But later that night under a full moon, she snuck off from the car where she was sleeping, stripped naked and dipped into some hot springs. Hallie was soon joined by Dodge, who told her: "Hey, I'm glad you didn't leave." They passionately kissed and began to have sex. Feeling miffed from afar as she quietly watched the two coupling together, Rinda felt out of place. The next morning, she told Hallie: "Look, I came here for a little bit of fun, a little bit of adventure, and I had some fun. I just didn't quite get the adventure. That's OK." She decided it was time to "move on" and proceed by herself to California. By happen-stance, Lt. Quinn (after spending the night in a motel in Kayenta) noticed Rinda's parked Cadillac in town. (Kayenta was 20 miles away - and a three hours drive from the canyon). While questioning her in a restaurant, he offered her the $10,000 reward for information leading to the suspect (possibly Dodge). She promised to lead Quinn back to the canyon - accompanied by a Navajo Nation law enforcement officer. Meanwhile, Hallie and Dodge were enjoying a second night at the hot springs. The film's title was attributed by Dodge to his father: "Born on a black day, you die on a blue night." In the film's unusual, plot-twisting conclusion, there were a number of startling and almost illogical revelations:
A few nights earlier near Hanksville, the night of the armored-truck robbery getaway, Hallie described - in flashback - to Dodge how she was in the backseat of their car driving along at night. Hallie's drunk husband Bo was driving when their car ran into a dead cow in the road. They had come across the accident-crash site with cash strewn everywhere. When a police car approached (retired officer Vern Pender), Hallie killed the cop, and walked off with the suitcase full of money. She had stashed the money in a bus-depot locker in Hanksville. Dodge proposed that they abscond with the money, slip into Mexico and "disappear." They drove to the location of Rinda's parked Cadillac back in Kayenta (outside Quinn's hotel room where he had stayed), and using Rinda's keys, drove back to Hanksville to retrieve the money in a blue suitcase at the depot. To celebrate, the two had sex in a motel room next to the opened suitcase stuffed with money. Later, Dodge left to acquire a different vehicle for their flight to Mexico. And then in the anti-climax, while Dodge was gone, Hallie's abusive husband Bo (with blackened skin) suddenly barged into the hotel room with lots of questions. He 'kidnapped' Hallie, seized the suitcase with cash, and drove off with her in Rinda's Cadillac. Dodge pursued after them in his newly-purchased used pickup truck. While driving, Hallie fought off her husband and was shot. Dodge watched from closeby as their Cadillac tried to beat a speeding freight train at a crossing. The car and train collided and the vehicle exploded. Hallie was thrown from the car. In the final images, Dodge was stunned by Hallie's death as he left the scene of Hallie's corpse and the scattered money, by running down the country road in the opposite direction - seen from an overhead view. |
Title Credits - Tarantula Hallie Threatening Her Unfaithful Husband in Hotel Room: "I'm gonna kill you, Bo!" Hallie on the Road with Rinda and Hitchhiker Dodge (in back seat with suitcase) Hallie (Mia Sara) with Dodge (Gil Bellows) at Hot Springs in Remote Arizona Canyon Lt. Quinn Hallie's Murderous Confession to Quinn: "He doesn't have it. I do!" Dodge and Hallie Celebrating the Money with Sex in a Hotel Room Dodge at Hallie's Corpse After Train Collision |
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The Celluloid Closet (1995) This documentary was inspired by Vito Russo's book The Celluloid Closet (1981), and narrated by Lily Tomlin and other stars. This was a groundbreaking compilation film about the distorted portrayal of gay men and lesbians on the big screen, from the earliest days of stereotypical representations to the present, illustrated by over 100 film clips. The films ranged from the earliest 'gay' and 'sissy' images in the silent era and early talkies, to Dietrich's cross-dressing in Morocco (1930), to Garbo's lesbian kiss in Queen Christina (1933), and through to more recent films such as Sunday, Bloody Sunday (1971), Cabaret (1972), Cruising (1980), Making Love (1982) and Philadelphia (1993). |
Queen Christina (1933) Making Love (1982) |
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Delta of Venus (1995) This was another of the many Zalman King-produced, soft-core, sensually-filmed and soft-focused erotic dramas (previously he helmed Two Moon Junction (1988) and Wild Orchid (1989), and produced 9-1/2 Weeks (1986) and Siesta (1987)). It was rated NC-17 for theatrical release, but then modified for an R-rated video release. The film was loosely adapted from Anais Nin's post-humously published erotic novel, about an American writer of erotic novels abroad in 1940s Paris named Elena Martin (Audie England) who thoroughly researched her subject matter by exploring her sexuality, while narrating in monotonous voice-over. She encountered fellow American expatriate Lawrence Walters (Costas Mandylor), another novelist and rower on the Seine River, who told her when they first met at a party: "I know you. This morning and the morning before that, and the morning before that, on the bridge..." She confirmed: "I write at night, and at sunrise, I take a walk along the river before I go to sleep." He responded: "I know...(You're) Elena Martin, American. You came to Paris four months ago to be a writer. Works hard, keeps to herself. Could be shy, could be a recluse." Afterwards, she thought to herself after they danced: "Time stood still. We could have been on the dance floor for ten minutes or two hours. I don't know." Shortly later, she wrote: "Before tonight, I was growing sad with restlessness and hunger. I felt that nothing would ever happen to me. I felt desperate with desire to plunge into living" - before plunging into a torrid, intimate, sexually-awakening affair with him. After he left for America, she also modeled nude for a life-drawing class ("Everyone's modeling nude, it's the rage"). To earn money at 200 francs/page, she took an assignment from her publishing agent to write pornographic stories (erotically unfolding on screen) for a wealthy benefactor (predictably mysterious) who wished to remain anonymous, thereby justifying her numerous sexual encounters in hedonistic Paris. She watched as big-busted red-headed hooker Bijou (Markéta Hrubesová) was ravished by a bald, black man. She attended an opium den where there was a naked lesbian orgy, and watched as a blind-folded man had sex with a veiled exhibitionist (Eva Duchkova).
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Elena Martin (Audie England) Bijou (Markéta Hrubesová) |
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Desperado (1995) Robert Rodriguez' cartoonish action film was the English language quasi-remake of his low budget cult classic El Mariachi (1992), a spoof of Sergio Leone's spaghetti westerns. It featured a smoldering love scene in a candle-lit room, shot with original camera angles and flash-cuts, between the two popular and attractive stars:
El Mariachi had come to the Mexican border town Ciudad Acuna, to avenge the death of a previous lover, targeting drug lord kingpin Bucho (Joachim de Almeida) for killing his first love and for taking the use of his right hand in a gunfight. |
Carolina (Salma Hayek) with El Mariachi (Antonio Banderas) |
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Embrace of the Vampire (1995) Director Anne Goursaud's R-rated erotic horror/thriller was a melding of vampires and blatant erotic sexuality of the soft-porn variety. The film was most noted for Alyssa Milano (a former TV sitcom Who's the Boss? child star) showing off her enhanced chest. The film's tagline: "The innocence is over" could have as well applied to the 'good girl' image that was shed by Milano as a result of this film. It told the story of a virginal, repressed college freshman named Charlotte Wells (Milano), unknowingly the reincarnation of a Transylvanian Princess (June 1986 Playboy Playmate Rebecca Ferratti), who was pursued and under the spell of a handsome, kinky vampirish demon-lover and soulmate (Martin Kemp), who must have her join him in three days - or die. He first approached Charlotte (Alyssa Milano) by appearing in her torrid, lustful dreams in the few days before her 18th birthday. The most memorable scene was the sensual encounter during a topless photo session between Charlotte and bisexual photographer Sarah (Charlotte Lewis) who introduced her to lesbianism - she was photographed topless while Sarah teased her hair, lightly touched her chest, placed Charlotte's own hand on her right breast, lightly caressed her face and lips - and then kissed her. Later in the film, the two further explored their sexual feelings for each other, with more intimate touching and kissing.
There was also a dreamy, kinky foursome sequence - a fantasy orgy scene that Charlotte imagined. |
Photo Shoot (continued) Charlotte with Sarah |
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Fair Game (1995) This mediocre action-thriller film from director Andrew Sipes garnered considerable press for having supermodel Cindy Crawford in her feature film debut as sexy, overachieving Miami civil law attorney Kate McQueen (or McQuean). She was targeted by a group of ex-KGB agents led by madman Colonel Ilya Kazak (Steven Berkoff), often on the run in a form-fitting T-shirt, or pulling herself up onto a dock with a wet T-shirt, or a teasing view of her changing her top - but it was a less-than superlative acting performance. She was involved in the action because she was in the process of impounding the Tortuga, a cargo ship that served as the bad guys' headquarters. In the film's conclusion, there was one long and unbelievable blow-'em-up pursuit sequence with time-out for one obligatory (and illogical in terms of plot) sex scene from Cindy (undoubtedly with all nude appearances of Crawford performed by a body-double) in a dirty freight train car (with annoying flickering shadows) alongside co-star William Baldwin as flirtatious, cigar-smoking cop Max Kirkpatrick. |
Kate (Cindy Crawford) |
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Forbidden Games (1995) (aka Games) The only reason for this R-rated, bargain basement-priced, soft-core film's existence was to capitalize on its rampant sexuality and gratuitous nudity, offering this enticing tagline on its poster:
It was not to be confused with Rene Clement's Forbidden Games (1952, Fr.) aka Jeux Interdits, of the same name. The thinly-veiled, erotic-thriller plot opened with the murder of Charles Douglas (Jefferson Wagner), the married head of a haute couture modeling agency known as Pinnacle Models, Inc. in Los Angeles, during a kinky and deadly S&M bondage sequence (seen in the film's opening and during flashbacks) with a straight-edged razor and deadly capsule. He was very wealthy, "tough and capable," but had a "weak spot" for women. Was it a murder (due to jealousy) or an accidental death (of a heart attack)?
The main character was introduced in the opening scene - ex-Justice Department detective Michael Brandon (Jeff Griggs) who had a "gift" of psychic powers, dreams and visions (often used to solve cases). [Note: He spoke in tones similar to Clint Eastwood's voice in Dirty Harry (1971).] Separated from his wife Rachel (Elizabeth Sandifer) (with a pending divorce), he was being seduced by blonde Linda (Becky Mullen) in his apartment, who became miffed and stormed off when he received a phone call from Rachel. After a high profile but incompetent investigation had been undertaken into the mystery of Charles Douglas' death a year earlier, Michael was privately commissioned to solve and end the mystery by Charles' step-daughter Shannon Douglas (Lesli Kay). [Note: She was in a lesbian relationship with her Asian-American assistant Beth (Liat Goodson).] Shannon mentioned that two key individuals probably had something to do with Charles' death:
Michael explained that he was on disability for a few years due to the stress involved from his psychic visions. However, he decided to take the case due to financial strains and the need for money ($100K to begin, and $200K more when completed). According to newspaper records, the deceased Douglas left $300 million to his grieving wife Tonya and business partner Shauna, and $100 million to charity. (Later, it was revealed that Charles' assets were frozen until the case was solved.) His first stop was a Playboy-styled mansion with lots of bikinied models strutting around, to speak to Shauna. At an outdoor pool, he came upon the bi-sexual Shauna sunbathing naked. She claimed she had a special but loving relationship with the deceased. It was suspected that she had an intense jealousy or resentment over any of Charles' other lovers. His next stop was to speak to the widowed wife Tonya, a horse-enthusiast. During a 'Family Night' on a Friday evening at the mansion, Michael was seduced by Shauna's friend Trish (Ashlie Riley) in an upstairs bedroom, while Shauna watched. On Sunday evening, during an invitation for a horse-ride and dinner at Tonya's place, he peeped on her as she bathed. And then in the middle of the night, he was summoned to the mansion for a threesome with Shauna and Trish - a kinky scene of blindfolded bondage that was photographed by a third female. The film also included a traditional lesbian love-making scene in a jacuzzi-spa between Shauna and her Russian assistant Amber (Aleksandra Kaniak) while the two were surrounded by large candles and a roaring fire. Toward the end of Michael's investigation, he realized that he and Tonya were falling in love, when he spent a full weekend with her at her invitation, including pool-swimming bathing together, and passionate love-making. He didn't know that he was being voyeuristically watched and video-taped by Shannon (for use as evidence to blackmail him). While Michael was in Tonya's arms, he suddenly realized (through a psychic vision) that Tonya, an unmasked Shannon, and Shauna were ALL responsible for the murder of Charles during kinky-bondage sex. In the final revelation, Shauna and Shannon joined them in the bedroom, where Shannon claimed she had hired Michael to close out the case (with his DA friend Ron Taylor (Edward Holzman)). He was pressured to call his DA friend and claim that Charles had simply died of a heart attack, so that Charles' assets ($300 million split three ways between the females) would become unfrozen for all of them. They had compromised Michael (by setting him up and photographing and videotaping him having sex) in order to ruin him and/or to persuade him to do their bidding. They claimed they liked Michael but were only doing what was expedient and right: "It wasn't personal. It was business...We had to do what we had to do." Shannon also bribed him by promising to give him $1 million more, not just $200K - a lucrative bribe: "We'll take care of you for the rest of your life." The threesome also claimed that Charles deserved to die and had no regrets. In the film's final plot conclusion, Michael was surveying a notebook of clippings about the resolution of the case. The $300 million had been released to the Douglas heirs, and a tell-all about Charles' real character had been revealed - he was both a wife beater and child molester. Michael had cooperated and benefitted from his decision - he was reunited and married to Rachel (now pregnant) at a plush ocean-side home, where his life had been turned around. |
Step-Daughter Shannon Douglas (Lesli Kay) Mistress Shauna (Amy Weber) at Outdoor Pool at Playboy Styled Mansion Model (Griffin Drew) at the Pinnacles Agency Widowed Wife Tonya Douglas (Gail Harris): Peeping Tom Bathing Scene Michael's Estranged Wife Rachel (Elizabeth Sandifer) Shauna's Friend Trish (Ashlie Rhey) Kinky Bondage Threesome with Michael The Unmasking of all of Charles' Conspiratorial Murderers - Tonya, Shauna, and Shannon Ending - Michael Reunited and Married to Pregnant Wife Rachel |
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Full Body Massage (1995) This 93 minute made-for-cable TV film, directed by Nicolas Roeg, was memorable for having the most unforgettable role of full-busted (38D) actress Mimi Rogers - she starred as Nina, an art dealer and gallery owner. The film consisted mostly of her weekly topless massage appointments with a new replacement masseur named Fitch (Bryan Brown), during which time they philosophically discussed relationships, life, art and various massage techniques. At one point, Nina mused: "Massage is sexual...very sexual," but Fitch countered: "Can be, doesn't have to be, shouldn't always be..."
Both of the characters also experienced flashbacks of their previous encounters, in which other individuals appeared naked (Gabriella Hall as a younger Nina, and Elizabeth Barondes as Alice, Fitch's most recent relationship although she suffered a tragic death). |
Younger Nina (Gabriella Hall) Alice (Elizabeth Barondes) |
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Ghost in the Shell (1995, Jp.) (aka Kôkaku Kidôtai) Japanese animated films (called anime) have often featured explicit and graphic content and unflinching explicit bloody violence, first evidenced in Akira (1988). This adult-oriented, PG-rated animation contained soft-core nudity and stylized erotica regarding the film's major character: the often nude and beautifully voluptuous but tough cyborg Major Motoko Kusanagi - a special security agent resembling a Playboy Playmate-like Terminatrix. |
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GoldenEye (1995, UK) The fictional femme fatale character of Xenia Onatopp (Famke Janssen) in the James Bond film GoldenEye (1995) exhibited sexual sadism in her physically-lethal, sociopathic role. In several memorable scenes, she displayed her 'orgasmic' pleasure in murdering others - either with a gun or with her muscle-bound thighs used as a body scissors-vice. During a love-making scene on a yacht with Canadian Admiral Chuck Farrell (Billy J. Mitchell), she achieved orgasm while suffocating him with her long legs. And in a steam bath scene in a Russian (St. Petersburg) hotel while draped in only a robe, she battled James Bond (Pierce Brosnan) by crushing and squeezing his ribs between her bare thighs. In the film, they also engaged in playful double-entendre lines of dialogue:
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Xenia Onatopp (Famke Janssen) |
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Haunted (1995, UK) After an appearance in Uncovered (1994), Kate Beckinsale also appeared in this R-rated, poorly-received haunted house mystery film (similar to Henry James' The Turn of the Screw) by director Lewis Gilbert from an adaptation of James Herbert's novel of the same name. Its tagline was unconvincing: "You will Believe..." The film, executive-produced by Francis Ford Coppola, was only released on DVD following Beckinsale's later prominence in films such as Pearl Harbor (2001). In the story set in 1928, guilt-ridden, skeptical American paranormal psychologist Camberly University professor David Ash (Aidan Quinn) - after the accidental drowning of his twin sister Juliet (Victoria Shalet) years earlier in 1905 - investigated the supposed 'haunting' of the upper-class Webb's family country estate (Edbrook Manor) by tormented spirits. The Sussex estate was inhabited by the elderly, mentally-troubled, tormented and frail maid, Nanny Tess Webb (Anna Massey), and three siblings:
In the midst of trying to debunk ideas of the supernatural (he was against spiritualists and mediums), Professor David Ash met Christina, who often appeared nakedly indifferent (posing nude for her brother's painting, skinny-dipping by diving off a dock and emerging through the tree's leaves, although with a body double). He also observed the pseudo-incestuous behavior between Christina with both of her brothers, but on one occasion was able to bed down Christina himself (although Robert spied upon them from the shadows).. In the film's twist ending, it was discovered that the house was frozen in time. The three Mariell siblings were all ghosts. As confirmation, David was led by the ghostly vision of his dead sister to the graveyard where he viewed the tombstones of the three Mariells, who died in 1923 in a fire. The Nanny had set the fires that killed them, after their distressed mother had committed suicide, upon learning of the siblings' incest. Although he eventually was able to escape from the haunted mansion when led away to safety by his dead sister Juliet, upon his return home, he was still being stalked by Christina. |
Christina (Kate Beckinsale) Posing For a Nude Portrait Painted by Her Incestuous Brother Robert Love-Making with David |
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Jade (1995) William Friedkin's sleazy, erotic psycho-thriller and murder-mystery who-dun-it from screenwriter Joe Eszterhas (with the script mostly rewritten by Friedkin) featured Linda Fiorentino (coming off her success in the previous year's The Last Seduction (1994)), kinky luridness, and aberrant sexuality, recycling Basic Instinct (1992). The film's title Jade referred to the alias of an unknown female, the main femme fatale protagonist, whose identity was a key to the murder. A 12 minutes-longer Director's Cut (for cable and VHS tape) was released with new storyline sequences as well as extended sex scenes. The theatrical film was negatively reviewed by critics, and was a box-office flop, receiving two Raspberry Award nominations for Worst Screenplay and Worst New Star (David Caruso). Its tagline heralded:
David Caruso (from ABC-TV's popular series NYPD Blue and later CSI: Miami) portrayed San Francisco Assistant DA David Corelli, who was investigating the brutal stabbing murder of millionaire Kyle Medford, a Russian Hill art collector who had a lot of friends - and enemies. The murder weapon was a highly valuable African ceremonial axe. The last person who saw him alive was Corelli's ex-lover and clinical psychologist Katrina 'Trina' Gavin (Linda Fiorentino) - a specialist in "hysterical blindness" who was now married to powerful SF lawyer Matt Gavin (Chazz Palminteri), an adulterous and philandering mate. Photographs of Governor Lew Edwards (Richard Crenna) having sex with prostitute Patrice Jacinto (model Angie Everhart) were found in Medford's safe. A hair-cutter in a Chinatown beauty salon, Patrice was shortly thereafter run over and killed by a hit-and-run driver to prevent her from talking to the DA. In the L.A. morgue during an autopsy in mid-March 1995, the coroner noted the bruises on her naked body. It was suspected that the Governor murdered presumed blackmailer Medford. However, Katrina appeared to also be involved in Medford's attempted blackmail. She became the prime suspect when her prints were found on the hatchet that killed Medford. She claimed innocence - that Medford had given her a tour of his artwork just before the murder. However, a sex videotape found at Medford's Pacifica beach house revealed that Katrina was also one of the call-girls - a popular one named Jade, who was having intercourse and oral sex with various clients. In the plot-twisting finale, the case was supposedly wrapped up when some of the Governor's dirty cops: Det. Bob Hargrove (Michael Biehn) and Governor's Aide Bill Barrett (Holt McCallany) were implicated in killing witnesses, including Patrice and Medford. However, in the last scene, Katrina found that Matt had laid out B/W photographs in her bathroom, revealing her having sex with men at the beach house. Matt admitted to Katrina that he murdered Medford because Medford would eventually have blackmailed both of them. Matt delivered the final line to her: "Trina, the next time we make love, you introduce me to Jade." |
Katrina Gavin/ or Jade (Linda Fiorentino) Photograph of Governor with Hooker Patrice Patrice Jacinto (Angie Everhart) |
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Kids (1995) Director Larry Clark's much-criticized, semi-improvised cinema verite film with lots of raunchy talk and simulated sex was considered bordering on sleazy child pornography and voyeurism (disguised as a cautionary documentary) although it was also one of the most truthful films ever made about teenage (and pre-teen) sexuality. It was released unrated to avoid the stigma of an NC-17 rating. The naturalistic film followed a group of sex-obsessed teenagers and preteens during 24 hours of a hot Manhattan summer, in which they partied at a friend's flophouse, shoplifted malt liquor at a convenience store, watched skateboarding videos, smoked dope, got into a fight in the park, and bragged about deflowering as many new girls as possible. In the opening scene, skinny 17 year-old skateboarder Telly (Leo Fitzpatrick) easily seduced 12 year-old Girl # 1 (Sarah Henderson). He asked: "Know what I want to do?" with the girl's blunt answers: "You want to f--k me. But you can't f--k me...You know why...'Cause I don't want no baby." He reassured her that he loved her before deflowering her:
In voice-over, as they made love amidst moans and grunts - and her complaints that it hurt, he stated:
Afterwards, he crudely bragged to his slacker pal Casper (Justin Pierce):
Casper asked: "Hey Telly, she suck your d--k, man?" Telly answered:
In a parallel scene of girlfriends, 16 year-old Jenny (young Chloe Sevigny), who had been devirginized earlier by Telly (her only instance of unprotected vaginal intercourse), told her promiscuous 17 year old friend Ruby (Rosario Dawson) that she was upset that she had been insensitively used, like so many others. Ruby stated the obvious:
From experience, Telly explained how he had to give a sweet-talk spiel to his female victims: "You got to be smooth. Girls like it slow and romantic." Both groups talked about foreplay, orgasms, blow-jobs, and condom use, and it was mistakenly thought that making love with virgins would keep one safe from becoming HIV-positive and AIDS-infected. However, results of a blood test determined that Jenny's sole sexual contact with Telly was damaging, and that she was HIV-positive, while Ruby was found to be "clean." Distraught, Jenny was determined to track down the predatory Telly, who had gone out with his friends - bringing along his latest female victim 13 year-old Darcy (Yakira Peguero). The group snuck into a fenced swimming pool area to go swimming in their underwear. Pseudo-lesbian friends Kim (Michelle Lockwood) and Joy (Carisa Glucksman), both in see-through wet bras, gave each other a long kiss. Soon, the group ended up at Steven's house party where kids were making out, smoking dope and drinking beer. At a rave party at a club called NASA, Jenny was given an "euphoric blockbuster" pill before arriving at the house party, where Telly was already seducing Darcy in the parents' bedroom with the same familiar lines. She came upon them having sex, with Darcy moaning in pain, and then Jenny passed out on a living room sofa. The film concluded with a controversial rape scene in which hung-over Casper fondled, kissed, undressed, and then forcibly raped the unconscious, helpless Jenny (with her legs held up in the air) - possibly infecting himself. Although she weakly pleaded "no," he shushed her ("It's me Casper, don't worry"). Later, the camera panned over the many wasted teenaged bodies littering the floor of the house, including Telly in the arms of his latest conquest Darcy, as his voice spoke off-screen with this soliloquy:
Casper sat up the morning after and spoke directly toward the camera: "Jesus Christ, what happened?" as the film ended. |
Telly with 12 year-old Girl # 1 (Sarah Henderson) Joy (Carisa Glucksman) and Kim (Michelle Lockwood) at Pool Party Telly with 13 year-old Darcy (Yakira Peguero) Casper Having Sex with HIV-Positive Jenny (Chloe Sevigny) The Morning After - Casper: "Jesus Christ, what happened?" |
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Leaving Las Vegas (1995) Director Mike Figgis' critically-acclaimed film was shot on Super 16 film and was notable for Nicolas Cage's Best Actor Oscar win, and a Best Actress nomination for Elisabeth Shue. It told about a romantically-involved co-dependent tragic couple:
Sera had been degraded by her profession during her association with abusive Latvian pimp Yuri (Julian Sands), who was apparently in trouble with Russian-Polish mobsters about to murder him for bad debts. After losing his job due to chronic alcoholism, Ben's plan was to drink himself to death over a four-week period in Las Vegas while enjoying the company of the high-class hooker. Sera was basically introduced delivering a monologue - she bragged about her skilled abilities as a call girl to her off-screen therapist:
During Sera's first encounter in a hotel room with Ben, she described the few ground rules in a typical spiel:
But he suffered impotence (due to his drinking) although that afforded them time to talk and begin to develop a relationship. Later in a scene by a motel pool (to Don Henley's singing of Come Rain or Come Shine), Sera straddled Ben's lap, removed the top of her one-piece black swimsuit, and enticingly nuzzled a bottle between her breasts and then poured alcohol over them for him to enjoy, before she returned the swimsuit straps to her shoulders; however, Ben fell over and shattered a glass table that left him cut, bruised and bleeding.
After breaking property poolside and causing issues and complaints, the two were asked to leave by the next morning: ("We get a lot of screw-ups here. Now you two, you take your loud talk and your liquor to your room. You check out first thing tomorrow. And after that, I don't want to see either one of you back here ever again. And don't you worry about payin' for anything. And don't you worry about cutting your little hands on the glass. Let's just leave it at that. See you in the morning"). The film also included the scene of Sera's brutal attack and gang rape by a group of three drunken college football jocks in their room at the Hotel Excalibur and Casino, who insisted on anal sex, but when she refused, she was beaten; afterwards, the battered and bloodied Sera washed away the blood and memory in the shower. By film's end - in a touching final scene, sickly pal Ben was in a hotel room, when Sera came to his side and asked: "Do you want my help?" - she then coaxed and readied him to be erect for a last loving act of intercourse (Ben: "See how hard you make me, angel? You know I love you") before he expired from toxic alcohol poisoning. The film ended with her final thoughts to her therapist (in voice-over), when she confessed her love for Ben, as she sat on the bed next to Ben's body: "I think the thing is, we both realized that we didn't have that much time, and I accepted him for who he was. And I didn't expect him to change. And I think he felt that for me, too. I liked his drama. And he needed me. I loved him. I really loved him." |
Sera's Monologue About Her Skills as a Hooker - to Her Off-Screen Therapist Sera In Hotel Room with Drunken Ben: "For $500 bucks, you can do pretty much whatever you want..." "How long is it gonna take for you to drink yourself to death?" Washing Away Blood After Brutal Gang-Rape Last Act of Intercourse on Ben's Death-Bed On the Bed Next to Ben's Body With Voice-Over (Speaking to Her Therapist) |
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Malicious (1995) This straight-to-video, formulaic romantic thriller (similar to Fatal Attraction) was justly famous (and received most of its publicity) for featuring the only nude scene (her debut one) from red-headed, ex-Brat Pack sweetheart star Molly Ringwald - a break-the-stereotype kind of role. Ringwald played the part of an obsessed, demented medical student named Melissa Nelson, who pursued (stalked) her college's star baseball player Doug Gordon (Patrick McGaw) - who already had a girlfriend named Laura (Sarah Lassez). While on a boat with him, Melissa tied her partner's hands and kissed his chest down to his groin area while straddling him. She then removed her own yellow sweater to reveal her firm, bare breasts as she hungrily kissed him repeatedly as they made love. After he rebuffed her and returned to his girlfriend, she psychotically sought "malicious" revenge and accused him of rape, as well as terrorized the couple in the predictable conclusion. |
Melissa (Molly Ringwald) |
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Mallrats (1995) Director Kevin Smith's youth-oriented, R-rated romantic comedy was the second in his inter-linked, low-budgeted series of View Askewniverse films, including:
The first three films, all strong cult films, were dubbed "The New Jersey trilogy." The film's predominant setting was a suburban shopping mall in New Jersey, where T.S. Quint (Jeremy London) and slacker/videogamer Brodie (L.A. skateboarder Jason Lee in his debut feature film) hung out after being dumped by their girlfriends, Brandi Svenning (Claire Forlani) and Rene Mosier (Shannen Doherty). A Dating Game-like TV show named Truth or Date was being filmed in the mall, coincidentally produced by Brandi's father Jared (Michael Rooker). Brandi was unable to go on a Florida vacation with T.S. when her father needed her to fill in after the original contestant drowned in the YMCA's pool. Because of T.S.' over-reaction to the snub, she broke up with him. Rene also dumped Brodie for his slacker ways (comic-collecting, and SEGA videogame obsession), and had already begun dating Shannon Hamilton (Ben Affleck), a clothing store manager. In an expected plot element, the two dopers decided to sabotage the show with the help of two drug-dealing dopers: Jay (Jason Mewes) and Silent Bob (director Kevin Smith). Gwen Turner (Joey Lauren Adams), the former girlfriend of T.S., briefly showed her breasts in a changing room scene. She was interrupted by Silent Bob, who continually was crashing into her dressing room while she was changing clothes. In the film's conclusion, she convinced Brandi that T.S. was a great boyfriend. In one of the film's weirdest sequences, Brodie and T.S. visited a local flea market, where they consulted with a topless fortune-teller psychic named Ivannah (Priscilla Barnes, famous for the 1980s TV show Three's Company). She advertised that she offered 'barechested' readings. As the two stood contemplating the sign, they had this discussion:
After deciding to hire the psychic for one of her readings, she charged 58 dollars and 60 cents. Shortly later, she described what was required for her psychic reading: "I should tell you something, but in order to do that, I have to work completely unfettered." She confessed that she had to be topless to give readings: "It's the only way that I'm effective." She removed her top, stroked her three bare nipples and breasts and predicted: "I can definitely sense the problem here - girl trouble." She gave them an accurate reading about their problems - their "respective steadies." She then showed off her unusual third nipple: "You can stare at it. I don't mind." Just before leaving, Brodie began to hesitantly ask: "Do you have...", and Ivannah completed his sentence: "...any other extra body parts?" She said she didn't, but came onto him: "You could double-check me... If you like." After the two satisfied guys left to win back their girlfriends, she peeled off the third nipple, popped it into her mouth, and said to herself: "Works every time." |
Gwen (Joey Lauren Adams) Topless Psychic Ivannah (Priscilla Barnes) |
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Money Train (1995) It was a rare phenomenon to see Jennifer Lopez nude in a film, and this one provided that unusual glimpse. In this action-thriller - and buddy comedy - she starred as Latina love-interest and co-worker Grace Santiago, providing the romantic spark between two foster brothers who were NYC transit police co-workers:
Although Charlie was interested in her, it was John whom she bedded. Their love-making was a respite from the film's plot - the two brothers planned to rob a "money train" - the armored collection vehicle (with armed guards) of the subway's daily revenue from the city's token booths. |
Grace (Jennifer Lopez) |