History of Sex in Cinema: 1978 |
Animal House (1978) (aka National Lampoon's Animal House) Director John Landis' classic, low-budget, very popular, low-brow, 'gross-out' anarchistic frat house comedy from National Lampoon was the first big-studio comedy of its kind aimed specifically at the teen and college demographic. It was Landis' follow-up film to the previous year's Kentucky Fried Movie (1977). Following the film was a TV series titled Delta House (1979). It set the standard for many subsequent teen comedies in the 1980s and after, and influenced films such as Porky's (1981), the Police Academy (1984-1994) and American Pie (1999-2012) film franchises, Up the Academy (1980), and Old School (2003). The 'guilty pleasure' R-rated film was an unexpected major hit - and the first of many other successors. It provided star-making roles for many young actors (John Belushi, Kevin Bacon, Tom Hulce, Tim Matheson, Stephen Furst, and Karen Allen). The quintessential college frat party film was set at fictional Faber College in the fall of 1962. It portrayed the rivalry between the prestigious Omega frat house, and the misfit Delta Tau Chi fraternity house - known for debauchery, drinking, and other misadventures. In the film's opening, two innocent freshman pledges who were best friends: shy Lawrence "Pinto" Kroger (Tom Hulce) and fat Kent "Flounder" Dorfman (Stephen Furst), had just been given the brush-off at the snotty Omega Theta Pi. So they decided to visit the Delta House closeby. Half of a mannequin crashed through a window and landed at their feet as they arrived. Out on the front lawn, they came up to the degenerate, slovenly John "Bluto" Blutarsky (John Belushi), who was visibly drunk (with a large glass vial of beer in his hand) and urinating. When they asked him: "Excuse me, sir, is this the Delta House?" he turned mid-stream toward them to answer, and proceeded to pee on both of them: "Sure, come on in." As they followed him up the frat's front porch steps, they each shook out their pants' legs with urine on them. With a slight grin and upturned arched eyebrows, he opened up the front door to the raucous party inside. He urged them: "Have a brew. Don't cost nothin'." The two potential recruits were shocked by the sight of Daniel Simpson "D-Day" Day (Bruce McGill) riding his motorcycle up the interior stairs of the frat house. The Delta fraternity, represented by Delta's Sgt-at-Arms John "Bluto" Blutarsky (John Belushi, a Saturday Night Live regular), was pitted in a madcap war against some ROTC members and the main Faber College administrator - the school’s Dean Vernon Wormer (John Vernon), who was in cahoots with the Omegas (presided over by the smug, jock athlete Greg Marmalard (James Daughton), and the ROTC cadet commander Doug Neidermeyer (Mark Metcalf), another member of the Omega house. The Dean described the regular antics of the Deltas: "Who dropped a whole truckload of fizzies into the varsity swim meet? Who delivered the medical school cadavers to the alumni dinner? Every Halloween, the trees are filled with underwear. Every spring, the toilets explode." Marmalard also had deep animosity for the Delta's slim and suave Delta rush chairman Eric "Otter" Stratton (Tim Matheson), who had previously dated and had sex with his present girlfriend Mandy Pepperidge (Mary Louise Weller), and was continually flirting with her.
Faber College's animalistic, misfit, beer-bellied, Delta fraternity member "Bluto" delivered other numerous gross-out belches and slobbish behavior (such as crushing beer cans on his head). In the cafeteria lunch line - he first munched on a hard-boiled egg with the shell (from the discarded food area), and during his progress along the counter, he piled up and overloaded food on his tray (and took bites out of a few items and put back the half-eaten remains), stuffed his pockets, and filled his mouth with an entire hamburger. At the cafeteria table, Bluto was asked by frat boy Greg Marmalard: "Don't you have any respect for yourself?"; when he sucked (or slurped) down a plate of bright green Jell-O in one gulp, one of the preppy sorority girls Barbara "Babs" Sue Jansen (Martha Smith) was also disgusted by him: "It is absolutely gross. That boy is a P-I-G, pig"; he followed up with a guess-what-I-am-impersonation: ("See if you can guess what I am now"), then punched his cheeks with his fists to send a cream puff in all directions: ("I'm a zit. Geddit?"). Then he instigated a food fight with the battle cry: "Food Fight!" One of its classic scenes was the 'Peeping Tom' scene of prankster "Bluto" perched on a ladder outside a sorority house top story window, watching a topless pillow fight. He glanced backwards to share a conspiratorial glance with the voyeuristic film audience behind him when he began spying on an undressing Mandy Pepperidge, Marmalard’s girlfriend, in her room. She momentarily touched herself, and in the excitement, Bluto's ladder tipped backwards. After an attempt at cheating by the Delta frat members failed miserably, Dean Wormer visited the fraternity house to tell them that their grade point average was the "the lowest in Faber history." He warned that they had already been on "double secret probation" all semester, and one more slip-up would doom them. To cheer themselves up, the frat house held a wild "Toga, Toga" party; during the Toga Party (which soon became a nationwide, raging phenomenon), on the stairway, Bluto smashed the guitar of a folk singer (Stephen Bishop) singing a sickly-sweet song: "I gave my love a cherry / That had no stone / I gave my love a chicken / That had no bones / I gave my love a story / That had no end / I gave..." The Dean's alcoholic and lecherous wife Marion (Verna Bloom) was invited to the party by "Otter" and submitted to having sex with him. (Later, after the Dean found out about her embarrassing indiscretions, he shipped his wife off to vacation by herself in Sarasota Springs.) During the toga party, new recruit Larry "Pinto" Kroger had invited a young supermarket clerk named Clorette DePasto (Sarah Holcomb) to the party. He brought her to a friend's room, where they made out, but then as the coed was helpfully removing her bra (with tissues stuffed inside), she passed out from excessive drinking. "Pinto" debated with a devil and angel figure (his conscience) on his shoulders about whether to take advantage of her: Devil: "F--k her. F--k her brains out. Suck her tits. Squeeze her buns. You know she wants it." Angel: "For shame! Lawrence, I'm surprised at you!" Devil: "Aw, don't listen to that jack-off. Look at those gazongas. You'll never get a better chance." Angel: "If you lay one finger on that poor sweet helpless girl, you'll despise yourself forever... I'm proud of you, Lawrence." Devil: "You homo"). "Pinto" ultimately resisted sexual temptation and took her home curled up in a shopping cart - and to his shock later discovered that she was the mayor's 13 year-old daughter. At a Probation Committee hearing and disciplinary student council meeting chaired by Greg, Sgt-At-Arms Neidermeyer listed several infractions of the Delts, including serving alcohol to freshmen during pledge week, a deficient grade-point average, the use of narcotic diet pills during mid-term exam week, and the debaucheries of the uproarious Roman Toga party, including "two dozen reports of individual acts of perversion SO profound and disgusting that decorum prohibits listing them here." After the Delts in the audience caused further disruptions (coughing as they blurted out "Blow-job" and "Eat me"), Otter spoke up to defend them: "The issue here is not whether we broke a few rules, or took a few liberties with our female party guests - we did. But you can't hold a whole fraternity responsible for the behavior of a few, sick perverted individuals. For if you do, then shouldn't we blame the whole fraternity system? And if the whole fraternity system is guilty, then isn't this an indictment of our educational institutions in general? I put it to you, Greg - isn't this an indictment of our entire American society?" Nevertheless, the Dean threatened to revoke Delta's charter, and warned them for the last time, with the threat of expulsion, that there was to be "no more fun of any kind." The Delts discovered that all of their frat's belongings were also confiscated. During a road trip to the nearby Emily Dickinson College, an all-girls school, "Otter" played a clever but tasteless trick on one of the female students. He convinced Shelly Dubinsky (Lisa Baur) that he was Frank Lyman - the uninformed fiancee of her recently-deceased roommate Fawn Liebowitz. (He knew of her death reported in the newspaper due to a kiln explosion.) He asked: "I don't think l should be alone tonight. Would you go out with me?" She cooperatively found dates for his three friends, and sympathetically provided him with grief-counseling by making out with him in a car. After dismal midterm grades for the Deltas, the Dean reprimanded many of the frat members in his office, with the classic line delivered to "Flounder" Dorfman: "Fat, drunk, and stupid is no way to go through life, son." The Delta house members were expelled from Faber, making them eligible for the military draft, encouraged by the Dean ("l have notified your local draft boards and told them that you are now all eligible for military service"). This prompted Bluto to deliver a memorable, factually-inaccurate, motivational challenge to his fellow frat brothers to join him to seek revenge on Dean Wormer and the clean-cut Omegas, after the Delta House Fraternity had been closed and they had all been kicked out of school and the war was "over": ("What? Over? Did you say over? Nothing's over until we decide it is. Was it over when the Germans bombed Pearl Harbor? Hell no!...And it ain't over now. 'Cause when the goin' gets tough, the tough get goin'. Who's with me? Let's go. Come on!"). After Bluto ran to the front door but no one followed him, he returned to chastize everyone: "What the f--k happened to the Delta I used to know? Where's the spirit? Where's the guts, huh? This could be the greatest night of our lives, but you're gonna let it be the worst. 'Ooh, we're afraid to go with you, Bluto, we might get in trouble.' (shouting) Well, just kiss my ass from now on! Not me! I'm not gonna take this. Wormer, he's a dead man! Marmalard, dead! Niedermeyer..." Otter agreed with Bluto: "Dead! Bluto's right. Psychotic, but absolutely right. We gotta take these bastards. Now, we could fight 'em with conventional weapons. That could take years and cost millions of lives. No, in this case, I think we have to go all out. I think this situation absolutely requires a really futile and stupid gesture be done on somebody's part"; Bluto shouted: "We're just the guys to do it...LET'S DO IT!" The Deltas' plan was to sabotage and ruin the next day's annual homecoming parade, with a "Deathmobile" - a modified armored vehicle - hidden inside a red and white cake-shaped breakaway parade float (with the words "EAT ME" on the side). During the parade, the cake-float (with the 'Deathmobile' concealed underneath) was driven by D-Day and steered to disable and divert all of the other floats - with its final target the main viewing podium. A cheerleader from one of the floats was catapulted into the room of a Playboy-reading young kid, who thanked God for his good luck. Out from the cake-float emerged the 'Deathmobile' that rammed into the bleachers, destroyed the platform, and upended the Dean, his wife, the mayor and their guests. |
"Bluto" (John Belushi) with Two Pledges: "Pinto" and "Flounder" Bluto: "Have a brew. Don't cost nothin'" "D-Day" Riding Up Stairs on His Motorcycle Inside the Deltas' Frat House Cheerleader Girlfriends Dating Omegas (l to r): "Babs" Jansen (Martha Smith) and Mandy Pepperidge (Mary Louise Weller) Delta's "Otter" (Tim Matheson) Flirting Inappropriately with Greg's Girlfriend Mandy Bluto Watching Sorority House Pillow Fight From Window "Toga, Toga" Party Bluto Smashing Singer's Guitar on Staircase Dean Wormer's Drunken Wife Marion (Verna Bloom) at the Toga Party Clorette DePasto (Sarah Holcomb) Just Before She Passed Out with Pinto "Pinto's" Dilemma - Advice From Angel and Devil Figures Otter's Defense of the Fraternity Before the Disciplinary Council "Fat, drunk, and stupid is no way to go through life, son" Playboy-Reading Kid Interrupted by Cheerleader Catapulted From a Crashed Float During the Homecoming Parade: "Thank you, God!" The Secret Weapon Under a Red-and-White Cake Float - the "Deathmobile" |
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Behind Convent Walls (1978, It.) (aka Interno di un Convento, or Interieur D'un Couvent) Director Walerian Borowczyk's erotic, well-photographed arthouse film was based upon notorious French author Stendhal's Roman Walks (or Promenades Dans Romanes). The soft-focus drama was one of a number of "Convent Erotica" sexploitation (or nunsploitation) films. It told about an early 19th century Italian nunnery run by a fervent, uptight, sword-cane-wielding disciplinarian Mother Superior, Abbess Flavia Orsini (Gabriella Giacobbe). In the opening sequence involving the cleaning of the chapel, the pale-faced, sexually-repressed nuns reveled in rousing organ music that whipped them up into a frenzy. They danced to violin playing, performed sexy acrobatic leg exercises, and engaged in same-sex breast fondling in a confessional booth. The pious Mother Superior was appalled by the sensual urges of her charges, fearing that the "King of Darkness" had overtaken them. To suppress their behaviors, she punished their hysterical, sacrilegious actions and sins against the Lord by forbidding them, although it was a vain effort, and forcing the guilty to repent and beg for forgiveness. She also resorted to searching rooms for contraband materials (confiscating mirrors, love letters, dirty pictures, etc.). Meanwhile, Sister Lucretia engaged in sexual encounters with a local man she had smuggled into the convent, and Silva (Alessandro Partexano) - the butcher ("meat man") was also engaged in an affair with Sister Martina (Loredana Martinez). The film's most notorious scene was one in which one of the nuns (Olivia Pascal) found a piece of wood (a large round dowel) and some broken window-panes of glass, deflected from a woodcutter below. She took the wood and some shards of glass back to her room and - while naked under her gown - she carved herself a large wooden dildo. She held the round stick of wood over a large bowl where the shavings were collected as she whittled.
She commissioned another artistic nun (who was in the midst of drawing a figure of a man with an erect penis!) to draw a small image of the bearded face of Jesus Christ to glue to the handle base of the carved wooden phallus - for blasphemous masturbatory purposes to induce religious ecstasy. In the hard-core versions of the film, she pleasured herself with the Jesus-headed wooden dildo, while watching the image of Jesus in a hand-held mirror, and causing bloody injury to herself. When caught using the bloody instrument which she had just rinsed in a white bowl, the Mother Superior angrily asked: "And what's this? Where did you get this stick?" The nun claimed that it was only a stick that "fell from heaven as I came down the hall. It smashed right through the window right at my feet." The Mother Superior became more incensed that the nun also had a mirror in her possession. She demanded to know what had happened before she arrived: "Now before I came in, what was going on? Show me, girl. What was going on here?" The nun complied and graphically demonstrated above her clothes, causing the shocked Mother Superior to exclaim: "In my presence, are you shameless?"
The Mother Superior found herself forced to deal with more serious forms of sexual experimentation - masturbation, lesbianism, and illicit sex. Her own niece - the love-starved, chaste nun Sister Clara (the director's wife Ligia Branice) began to regularly meet up and be seduced by the zealous Father Confessor (Mario Maranzana), while she also had ecstatic sex with his ne'er-do-well but handsome, virile nephew Rodrigo Landriani (Howard Ross). The visits of the local meat butcher Silva the "meat man," were restricted after he was found having a secret affair with Sister Martina. One of the nuns, Sister Veronica (Marina Pierro) inflicted stigmata on herself with a bouquet of thorny roses attached to the crown of a crucifix. The film ended with the Mother Superior accidentally dead of a poisoning overdose of laudanum or morphine (placed into her tea), and a few of the distraught nuns had committed suicide. |
Sister Clara's Sexy Leg and Body Exercises Sister Lucretia's Sexual Intercourse with Local Man Female Breast-Fondling in the Confessional Booth Pregnancy A Flurry of Sexual Activity Sister Clara Becoming Hypersexualized One of the Dead Suicidal Nuns |
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Coming Home (1978) Director Hal Ashby's late 1970s liberal, well-acted anti-war treatise which ultimately cost about $7.2 million, grossed $32.7 million in the U.S. The successful film depicted the effects of the Vietnam War - in the intimate, steamy and provocative relationship (both sexual and romantic) between:
Sally's deranged, war-captain Marine husband Capt. Bob Hyde (Bruce Dern) was on a lengthy tour of duty in Vietnam, and formed the third part of a dangerous romantic love triangle. As Luke was rehabilitated, he developed a strong and sensitive emotional relationship with Sally, and eventually they made love together. According to reports of the film-making, the sex scene was fraught with anxiety. Although Sally was on top during traditional intercourse, Luke was able to accurately gauge her sexual needs and provide her with her first orgasm through oral sex. Her pleasurable reaction was recorded on her face and in her squirming legs wrapped around his back. It was a very lengthy, milestone scene for a 1970s film. When Hyde returned home from the front with a self-inflicted accidental injury, he confronted the two lovers with menacing anger, but ended up committing suicide by walking naked into the ocean where he presumably drowned. |
Sally (Jane Fonda) with Paraplegic Luke (Jon Voight) Sally's Adultery with a Paraplegic |
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Fairy Tales (1978)
Independent filmmaker and director Harry Hurwitz (aka Harry Tampa) made a career out of three low-budget comedies:
In the mid-1970s, there had been a trend to release alternate sexy versions of full stories, such as Alice in Wonderland (1976), and Cinderella (1977). Fairy Tales was a low-brow, smutty, and vulgar musical sex comedy - an X-rated parody composed of various Mother Goose nursery rhyme characters. They were randomly placed into the plot, spouting leering and dirty sex jokes littered with double entendres, voyeurism, simulated sex, and some full-frontal nudity. The naughty film's tagline was: "Some Day Your Prince Will Come." On his 21st birthday, an impotent Prince (Don Sparks) was not interested in a very-willing Naked Girl (Idy Tripodi) given to him by his advisors as a birthday present in his bed (she complained: "You're no fun!"). The Prince's manic sex expert Dr. Eyes ("Professor" Irwin Corey) joked: "They only make semen white and urine yellow so that you know whether you're comin' or goin'" - and "My moon is in Scorpio, and my Venus is five inches below my belly-button. Well, it's better there than in Uranus." The Prince sought to find the virginal Princess Sleeping Beauty in the Land of the Fairies to "sire an heir" to the throne with her, before forfeiting his royal throne in only a few days. Sexually attracted to her painting ("I'm sure it would work with her"), the horny Prince set out on a quest to impregnate his comatose dream girl Sleeping Beauty (future 80's scream queen and Queen of the B's Linnea Quigley). The fractured fairy tale elements included numerous characters during the Prince's journey:
Finally by film's end, after Gussie Gander failed to arouse the Prince, he came upon the awakening virginal Sleeping Beauty who asked: "I've been waiting for him to kiss me. What took you so long?" Soon after, the Prince made love to his Princess, and they drove off in a horse-drawn carriage to his castle where they constantly were in bed and refused interruptions. The concluding epilogue featured the doorman strangely hawking three items: a love potion, an "official fairy tale Little Bo Peep sheep" for single lonely fellas, and "the official codpiece as worn by Sirus in this motion picture." |
Naked Girl (Idy Tripodi) Little Bo Peep (Angela Aames) Shoe Elevator Girl (Mariwin Roberts) Snow White (Anne Gaybis) Jill (Lindsay Freeman) Masked S&M Dancers |
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Get Out Your Handkerchiefs (1978, Fr./Belgium) (aka Préparez Vos Mouchoirs) Writer/director Bertrand Blier's R-rated odd and unconventional comedy farce (the Best Foreign Film Oscar winner!) told about an unusual sexual awakening. Its tagline was:
It told about a long-suffering husband and wife's strained relationship:
Raoul went to great and drastic lengths to sexually satisfy his bored wife. He first tried to enlist other lovers to have sex with her and possibly get her pregnant. The first failed candidate was bearded, glasses-wearing schoolteacher Stéphane (Patrick Dewaere), a Mozart lover who also was meticulous about arranging his complete collection of Pocket Books.
However, success finally came through a match-up with underaged, high-IQ, precocious, socially-awkward 13 year old virginal boy, Christian Boloeil (Riton Liebman). After Solange rescued the boy from bullies' hazing, she brought him to her bed where he peeked at her beneath her nightgown as she slept. Although she was shocked by his explorations, she soon gave herself to him and ended up becoming pregnant by him. |
Solange (Carole Laure) |
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Halloween (1978) Director John Carpenter's low-budget slasher film Halloween (1978), at its time, was the most profitable independent film in industry history, with a domestic box-office gross of $47 million. The landmark film set in motion the Puritanical, psycho-pathological principle that surviving murder by a psychopathic killer was directly related to the degree of one's sexual experience. It also asserted the allegorical idea that sexual awakening often meant the literal 'death' of innocence (or oneself). In the film's opening sequence (filmed from the POV of the young killer wearing a Halloween mask) - after teenaged Judith Myers (Sandy Johnson) had sex with her boyfriend Tommy (David Kyle), the six-year-old killer Michael Myers (Will Sandin as boy) took a large butcher knife, entered his near-naked sister's upstairs bedroom where he found her sitting and brushing her hair in front of a vanity table. After he surveyed her bedsheets, she turned and recognized her brother: "Michael!" The act of illicit sex stirred him to commit a hideous crime. Although she tried to defend herself, he furiously stabbed her to death in a brutal murder, and her bloodied body tumbled to the floor. In this film, the murders often occurred after sexual encounters when victims were distracted and off-guard. The dark silhouette of the serial killer Michael Myers was slightly visible to the right as teenaged Lynda (P.J. Soles) and her boyfriend Bob (John Michael Graham) made love in a bed next to a jack-o-lantern. Shortly later, Bob was killed by stabbing and Lynda was strangled with a phone cord. The virginal baby-sitting main character Laurie (Jamie Lee Curtis) was able to escape mostly unscathed (as did the asexual Dr. Loomis, the young pre-teen Tommy Doyle, and asexual Myers himself!), but others who were more promiscuous and sexually-charged were less fortunate and suffered deadly consequences as stalked victims. |
Judith Myers (Sandy Johnson) Lynda (P.J. Soles) |
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I Spit on Your Grave (1978) (aka Day of the Woman) Director/writer Meir Zarchi's low-budget vengeance story was a notorious gang rape/vigilante film with exploitative splatter-horror film elements. The film was banned outright in many countries, and vilified by critics everywhere. In this exploitative, X-rated notorious gang rape/vigilante splatter-horror film, traumatized victim Jennifer Hills (Camille Keaton) took her vengeance against four local attackers, who had subjected her to a brutal, lengthy, humiliating beating and multiple rapes. As the film opened, thin NYC socialite/aspiring short story writer Jennifer Hills (Camille Keaton, married to director/writer/producer Zarchi at the time of filming) rented a remote and woodsy, upstate NY lakeside dwelling in upstate NY (filmed in Connecticut) for the summer, to write her first novel. When she first arrived at the home, she went skinny-dipping. She inadvertently met aimless locals at a gas station:
Next were two entirely painful-to-watch rape sequences that were graphic and lengthy (30 minutes in a 100 minute film!), and particularly vicious and heinous, and included both a vaginal and brutal anal rape in the muddy forest, and then more sexual assault in her house. She was aggressively harrassed, confronted, and repeatedly violated by the four locals, who used the excuse that they were aiding Matthew in losing his virginity. ("The broad's all yours. Come on....We got her for you"). So they stripped her of her bathing suit and offered her up, but when Matthew chickened out ("I can't do it now, not now!"), Johnny raped her in a meadow in degrading fashion. She vainly struggled against them as she was held down and violated. She crawled away and ran off, only to be tracked down again by harmonica-playing Andy - and then brutally and anally raped by Andy while restrained over a large boulder - and letting out a horrendous scream! There was a second rape in her rental house by an impotent, slightly-drunken Matthew. He complained to his buddies: "I can't come, you're interrupting my concentration...I can't, not with people watching me." As Jennifer laid there helpless, Stanley told her: "Total submission. That's what I like in a woman. Total submission," then briefly bottle-raped her and thrust his crotch into her face, yelling: "Suck it, bitch!" as he repeatedly slapped her and called her a whore. When ordered and coaxed into stabbing Jennifer to death in the heart to eliminate their only witness to the multiple crimes ("If she's dead, she can't point her finger at us"), Matthew faked the murder by spreading blood on the knife blade. Bruised and battered, the traumatized victim Jennifer knelt under a cleansing shower. Two weeks later after Jennifer was spotted on the lawn by the river, Matthew was beaten up for lying. Afterwards, the traumatized victim Jennier visited a church and prayed for forgiveness (while vowing to seek angry-cold-blooded revenge) before the brutal and bloody counter-assault she had planned against each of the four attackers. Two of the killings involved sexually seducing and distracting the men beforehand, in order to lower their defenses:
The most dramatic of her four counter-attacks against the rapists was reserved for gas station manager and family man Johnny.
She enticingly invited him back to her rented summer house, promising: "Come on, I'll give you a hot bath." Naked in the warm bathtub with him, she manually stimulated him as he closed his eyes and relaxed ("You've got great hands - God bless your hands. Oh yeah, that's fantastic"). She conducted a lethal bloodletting castration - a literal bloodbath with a conveniently-placed carving knife (his first reaction: "That's so sweet, it's painful"), causing him to bleed to death in the locked bathroom ("What have you done to me? Oh, God! Oh, s--t!...I can't stop the bleeding...It won't stop bleeding!"). In the living room, she calmly sat in a rocker and listened to a Puccini opera on the phonograph as he screamed in the background and died. She burned his clothes in the fireplace, cleaned up the blood-splattered bathroom, and dumped his body on the basement stairs. |
Jennifer Hills (Camille Keaton) Jennifer: Skinny-Dipping Jennifer's Two Rapes in the Woods Rapes in the House Matthew's Attempted Rape Bottle Rape by Stanley Matthew Faking Jennifer's Death Cleaning Up after Rapes Visit to Church Andy Axed in Back Stanley Disemboweled by Motorboat |
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Malibu Beach (1978) The quintessential 70s teen beach sexploitation film by writer/director Robert J. Rosenthal and Crown International Pictures had the taglines:
The simplistic R-rated film was very forgettable and bland, although typical of late 70's and early 80's teen-beach movies of the time, with a sprinkling of T&A shots. The mostly-plotless beach film was set at Malibu in S. California, and had all the typical ingredients of teen sex comedies, including a non-stop disco-inspired soundtrack and:
The film's recurring gag was of a dog (owned by Ms. Plickett) stealing a different female sunbather's bikini top SEVEN times. The main plot was about four Malibu California teenagers after the end of the school year, who looked forward to many days of surf and sex on the Malibu Beach:
Although Bobby made love to both Glorianna and to Sally on the same day, while Paul hooked up with Dina that evening, Bobby became particularly interested in Dina after a midnight skinny-dip swim, and Paul paired up with Sally. Dina's and Bobby's mutual interest in each other led to a pair of love-making scenes on the beach and in her bedroom.
Also competing for Dina's attention (against Bobby) was muscle-bound, motor-cycle riding, older trouble-maker Michael Dugan (Stephen Oliver), who eventually ended up with schoolteacher Ms. Plickett (Flora Plumb). Antics throughout the film included a game of chicken in cars, two incompetent cops (a drunk and a pothead), a long bumper-cars sequence, and a swimming race involving both a fake and real shark. |
Bobby's Ex-Girlfriend Glorianna (Tara Strohmeier) Sally (Susan Player) Skinnydipping with Paul Foursome Skinny-Dip The Dog's Collection of Seven Colorful Bikini Tops |
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Midnight Express (1978) Director Alan Parker's harrowing drama was factually-based upon the main character's account - an American student who described his experience in a 1977 book and told about his brutal imprisonment in a hellish Turkish prison for hash possession. The screenplay was written by Oliver Stone, who took some cinematic liberties with the facts. When the film was accused of presenting anti-Turkish sentiment, Stone apologized (many years later) for his tampered celluloid version. In early October of 1970, young American student Billy Hayes (Brad Davis) was arrested at the Istanbul, Turkey airport when security guards found bricks of hash taped to his torso. He was sentenced for drug possession to over four years in prison.
Over the years, he was stripped at gunpoint, and forced to endure beatings, rape (although fictionalized), and torture by sadistic guards, including chief guard Hamidou (Paul L. Smith). In one scene during his incarceration, the sexually-desperate Billy asked his prison-visiting girlfriend Susan (Irene Miracle) to show him her breasts. She pressed them against the partition's glass so he could kiss them and pleasure himself. She sobbed: "I wish I could make it better for you."
The end titles played over a freeze-frame of Billy's escape in 1975 - accompanied by a montage of still-framed B/W photographs of his reunion with his family and girlfriend:
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Touching Susan (Irene Miracle) Separated by a Glass Partition |
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Nicole (1978) (aka Crazed, or The Widow's Revenge) The plot of writer-director István Ventilla's suspenseful, poorly-made erotic thriller from Troma Productions allegedly resembled one of the lost works of William Shakespeare, named Cardenio. At one time, it was an impossible-to-find relic. However, it was then released on DVD to capitalize on its rarity - to showcase or highlight the 'one of a kind' topless nudity by its two female characters - one an older star (in a comeback role), and one a future star:
A slightly mad, wealthy and reclusive Nicole (Leslie Caron), a decadent and lustful bisexual widow, lived in a luxurious mansion with her strange and burly, live-in chauffeur-butler Malcolm (Ramon Bieri). In a flashback (the film's opening scene), he murdered his adulterous wife (Patrice Bough) and her male partner. Socialite Nicole also became obsessed over young and innocent aspiring dancer Sue (Catherine Bach) in a ballet class, and befriended her by offering minor plastic surgery (a nose job) and a place to live at the mansion. She had secretly redecorated Sue's apartment and replaced the young woman’s wardrobe. They shared a brief breast groping and cupping (possibly with a body double). Ultimately, Nicole was attempting to create a threesome, involving:
The film concluded with Fletcher's death (executed by Malcolm) and Sue's death - mauled by Nicole's trained Great Dane guard dogs. |
Sue (Catherine Bach) Lesbian Groping of Sue (Catherine Bach) by Nicole (Leslie Caron) Threesome: Nicole, Sue, and Fletcher |
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Pretty Baby (1978) Louis Malle's provocative R-rated American debut film - a semi-scandalous picture upon its release, was criticized for being child porn. It debuted at a time when there was public uproar over child abuse, child pornography, and child prostitution. Malle had hired a female scriptwriter (Polly Platt) to insure that the film was dealt with in a sensitive manner, with an emphasis on vicarious pleasure. Some worried that young Brooke Shields would be traumatized by her 'adult' role in the film - yet the entire film was basically free of explicit scenes or language. Today, the historical drama would be considered fairly tame. However, the film was banned in various countries, or censored versions were the only ones allowed. Various versions were edited (with dark shading, readjusted formats or closeups), and a G-string shield was worn to avoid portraying the underage nudity of the budding, prepubescent Brooke Shields. Two scenes of Shields' nudity were removed from some versions of the film in various countries. Some critics recognized that the film possibly portrayed Brooke Shields as a defenseless and naive daughter used by her manipulative mother - similar to her publicity-fueled image in real-life. The fictional yet historically-inspired drama was based on Al Rose's 1974 non-fictional book Storyville, New Orleans: Being an Authentic, Illustrated Account of the Notorious Red-Light District. The tagline described the film's point of view - mostly framed from a young child's vantage point:
It was gorgeously photographed by Bergman-cinematographer Sven Nykvist, and realistically set in a 1917 New Orleans bordello in the legalized red-light district of Storyville during the Great War. Customers were entertained with ragtime music in the brothel by cathouse piano player "The Professor" (Antonio Vargas). The erotic, slice-of-life drama told the plodding, tragic coming-of-age story of a virginal, jaded 12 year-old Violet (former child model Brooke Shields at 11 years of age in her breakthrough role) - a pre-teen child prostitute who lived with her languid New Orleans brothel mother Hattie (Susan Sarandon). Ernest J. Bellocq (Keith Carradine) often frequented the bordellos to photograph the working girls. During one of Bellocq's photo sessions with Hattie (while Violet watched inquisitively), she bragged about her body:
Bellocq requested that she sprinkle white powder on her shoulder and her exposed breast. Hattie dusted herself, and then provocatively wiped the powder from her nipple with a moistened finger. Violet attended the entire shooting, and was accused of getting in the way of the day's work by Bellocq. Once Violet turned 12, the brothel madam - cocaine-sniffing Madam Nell (Frances Faye) encouraged brothel patrons to bid in an auction for the matter-of-fact honor of taking Violet's virginity ("Remember, gentlemen, she's as fresh as a baby's lips"). Wearing a sheer nightgown and holding a lighted sparkler, Violet was carried out and paraded around on a red velvet platform. Violet's first night as a prostitute went to the highest bidder ($400 cash). After Violet's deflowering, the buyer (Don Lutenbacher) scurried off and left Violet lying motionless and quiet on an upstairs bed. Everyone rushed in with worry: ("Get a doctor! She's been murdered!"), but after a long delay, Violet stirred and rebuked everyone by joking: "Well, I'd like to know where the hell y'all been? I been lying here forever! You don't care about me at all." However, she did wince when she sat up - evidence that the experience was painful. Later, in one of the film's more contested scenes, Madam Nell interrupted Violet in her bath to offer the naked Violet to a dumb-founded farmer - a prospective customer:
To better herself and become more respectable, Hattie decided to marry one of her rich clients-customers, Mr. Alfred Fuller (Don Hood) and move to St. Louis. Violet refused to go with her mother, and Hattie gave her future husband the impression that Violet was her younger sister, not her daughter! As Hattie left, she promised to return at some time to retrieve Violet (once she told her husband the truth). In the meantime, the abandoned (or deserted), coquettish and headstrong Violet (after a run-in with Madam Nell) decided to move in with Bellocq to get away from the brothel. Bellocq took the young girl into his residence - signifying the complete loss of her innocence. At one point earlier, Violet naively told him: "I love you once, I love you twice, I love you more than red beans and rice!" Their relationship (with such an age gap) was highly unusual and often contentious, more like a squabbling parent-child. In one sequence, when Violet reclined for a long period of time on a chaise lounger as the obsessed and voyeuristic Bellocq fiddled with his camera for more picture-taking of his nude model (similar to sessions with her mother), the very childish Violet became restless, irritable, and frustrated. She lept up and approached the camera angrily and rebelliously:
To spite him, she smashed a photographic plate and scratched out the image on another. He viciously slapped her across the face, ordered her out of his house, and locked her in one of the rooms - treating her like a child:
After quarreling with Bellocq, Violet returned to the brothel although by now, the Storyville brothels were no longer legal and were closing down. Violet had little choice, now abandoned, but to marry Bellocq. A license was acquired before a judge and the ceremony was officiated in a church. Two weeks later, Hattie arrived to take back Violet, when she unexpectedly arrived from St. Louis with her new husband Mr. Fuller, a pavement contractor. She claimed: "I told him all about you, Violet, and he insisted that we come and get ya....And he wants you to come home with us." The marriage was considered illegal and null at her age, without Hattie's consent: "It is not legal without my consent." Mr. Fuller argued that Violet would thrive with a more conventional and proper life and a chance at being schooled:
Although Bellocq was adamant and refused: "Well, you cannot take her! I can't live without her... that's all," he had no choice in the matter, and neither did Violet. At the train station before departure, Mr. Fuller took a few family snapshots - the last film image was an ambiguous freeze-framed image of an unsmiling Violet - not really a child anymore. |
Pretty Baby (Brooke Shields) Frequest Brothel Visitor: Photographer Ernest Bellocq (Keith Carradine) One of Bellocq's Actual Turn-of-the-Century Portraits Brothel Madam Nell (Frances Faye) Bidding on Violet During Auction After Deflowering: "Where the hell y'all been?" (l to r): Violet and Her Mother Hattie - Who Wished to Leave the Brothel Violet to Bellocq: "I love you once, I love you twice, I love you more than beans and rice" Violet (Brooke Shields) with Photographer-Husband Ernest Bellocq (Keith Carradine) Marriage to Bellocq Hattie's Return to Take Violet Family Picture at the Train Station Film's Final Ambiguous Freeze-Framed Close-Up of Violet |
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Sextette (1978) One of the worst turkey films (or flops) ever made was "sin-sational" Mae West's final film (her first film was in 1932, 46 years earlier) - it was an embarrassing and campy effort directed by Ken Hughes and distributed by Crown International Pictures. The musical sex comedy was based on her own early-1940s Broadway musical, titled Sextet, set in a high-class English hotel in the 1930s. The bawdy Mae West maintained her sex-kitten persona while parodying herself at the age of 85. It told about aging Hollywood actress Marlo Manners (Mae West) - now known as Lady Barrington, who was in London, paired with her newlywed sixth husband:
They were spending their honeymoon in a hotel suite which was also the site of an international conference composed of diplomats. The couple was constantly being interrupted by hotel personnel, requests for interviews, PR demands, fans, reporters, and fashion and photo sessions. There were a host of cameo and guest appearances by many celebrities, including Beatles' Ringo Starr, Tony Curtis, George Hamilton, Alice Cooper, Rona Barrett, Regis Philbin 0 and George Raft and Walter Pidgeon in their final film roles. Three of the gentlemen were Manners' previous husbands:
One of the most improbable and awkward scenes found Lady Barrington in a gymnasium surrounded by studly, sex-hungry muscular men from the US Gymnastics Team. She was in the process of dictating her scandalous memoirs, and often croaked uncomfortable, and unfunny double entendres or quips as she strutted around:
At one point, Sir Michael spoke/sang to her the disco hit and their signature tune Love Will Keep Us Together, which West lip-synched. At the end of the film when the morose Sir Michael found her lounging, finishing her taped memoirs, and waiting for him in his yacht's bed. He walked over to the bed where he commended her - and she provided a comeback line:
A long phallic-shaped cannon blasted and a British flag was raised, as the yacht, 'Lady Marlo,' sailed away on the Thames. |
Marlo Manners (Mae West) (aka Lady Barrington) with Sir Michael Barrington (Timothy Dalton) Lady Barrington in a Gym Surrounded by US Athletes Lady Barrington in Bed: "The British Are Coming!" |
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Stay As You Are (1978, It./Sp.) (aka Cosi' Come Sei) This little known provocative European film from director Alberto Lattuada was released in the US in late 1979. Young Nastassja Kinski's role was the precursor to her role in director/lover Roman Polanski's Tess (1979). It told about a May-December romance (and possible incest) between:
Giulio was sexually-tempted by Francesca, but worried about it because she resembled the woman he had an affair with two decades earlier - and she might be his own daughter. The film included full frontal female nudity, and scenes of various interludes of love-making and playfulness, including a notable bedroom and breakfast scene, in which she encouraged him to spank and then bite into her rear end, and another unusual scene in which she offered him a cup of her pee. |
Francesca (Nastassja Kinski) |
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The Stud (1978, UK) This late 1970's camp sexploitation film from director Quentin Masters was a sordid adult tale of sexual lust and illicit love that told about the rise and fall of the film's male "stud." The pretentious story, enhanced on film by a disco-era soundtrack (the rage at the time following Saturday Night Fever (1977)), was adapted from the 1969 book of the same name by trashy romance novelist Jackie Collins (it was her second novel) - the younger sister of the film's main star. Its tagline was:
After the film's success , a companion film sequel (actually a prequel) was released:
The two films skyrocketed Joan Collins' career when she was offered a similar role as a scheming and conniving ex-wife, beginning in the second season of ABC-TV's long-running show Dynasty from 1981 to 1989. The Stud (1978), set in the late 1970s in London, opened with a tracking shot-scan of a studly male's bulletin board, with signed notes from many females thanking him for his sexual conquests, including an autographed photo from "Jackie" (aka Jackie Collins, the novel's author, and sister of the film's star). Early in the morning, a pretty female named 'Felicity' (or Deborah) (Felicity Buirski) quietly dressed and tried to tiptoe out of the stud's bedroom after spending the night. As she left at about 6 am, the phone rang - it was for Tony Blake (Oliver Tobias), the virile and studly male from the East End. The main character of The Stud wasn't the male stud, however, but was his female employer who was calling:
Fontaine worked at her husband's members-only London disco night-club (the Hobo) as the hostess, where she had made Tony the club's manager - and her personal plaything. Once Tony arrived at the club, she called and impatiently asked for him to immediately come to her aid - to satisfy her voracious and insatiable sexual needs: "A car's waiting for you. So am I?" She threatened his job if he didn't comply with her physical demands whenever she wished. He was hoping, eventually, to quit the club and open his own nightclub with investment broker Ian Thane (Peter Lukas). When Tony arrived at Fontaine's mansion in a chauffeured Rolls-Royce, he was intercepted by her in the elevator. The two made love there while being filmed by the b/w CCTV security camera videotape system that would later incriminate them to Fontaine's husband. During another of Tony's one-night stand trysts, Tony's female admirer: black model centerfold Molly (Minah Bird), came to assume that Tony was a gigolo-for-hire. She laughed after having sex with him: "Hey, you do this for a living, huh? And I got one for free, with a real professional." While with her best friend Vanessa (Sue Lloyd), Fontaine watched her own recorded elevator sex tape, and noticed that the unenthusiastic Tony was checking the time on his watch as they were mid-tryst. She began plotting, it appeared, to ultimately replace him. At times, she would humiliate Tony, with lines such as:
Meanwhile, Tony had also started an affair with Fontaine's manipulative, scheming and nubile step-daughter Alex Khaled (Emma Jacobs). Teenaged Alex specifically seduced and targeted Tony - to seek revenge at the adulteress Fontaine for cheating on her father. Alex had viewed the notorious videotape of them making love in the elevator, and despised Tony for breaking her father's heart. During their last encounter - a brutal rejection, she admitted that she had vengefully used him to retaliate against Fontaine. The film's rampant sex culminated in a notorious Christmas-time group orgy sequence ("a night to remember"). Tony and Fontaine had been invited to Paris to attend a dinner pool-side. After heavy intakes of drugs and alcohol, Tony and Vanessa's gay-swinger-husband Leonard (Mark Burns) walked over to the Parisian hotel's swimming pool with greenish-tinged water. [Note: The scene was filmed in The Sanctuary in London's Covent Garden.] Leonard noticed two nude lesbian female nymphs in the pool and delivered a memorable put-down line about women:
The foursome of Tony, Fontaine, Leonard, and Vanessa became crazed participants in sexual activities in the pool. Fontaine was swinging on an ivy-coated swing while being fondled by Leonard. The pool scene ended with Tony realizing that he was receiving oral sex from Leonard rather than from one of the females, and he ran off completely humiliated.
Back in London, Fontaine's husband viewed the videotape of his wife's indiscretions with Tony. At the same time in Paris the morning after, Fontaine spitefully fired Tony, citing that she wanted someone a little more "up-market!" To seek revenge on his cheating wife, Khaled cut off Fontaine's support with divorce proceedings (on the grounds of adultery). When she returned from Paris, she was informed of the legal actions against her. All her clothes and personal belongings had been removed, and all of her financial ties had been severed. She was devastated and dropped to the floor. During a New Years' Eve celebration at the club where Tony went to celebrate, he found that he had been replaced as the manager, and that his planned deal with Thane to finance his own nightclub was off. After being beaten up by thugs and ex-acquaintances in the restroom, he raced for the club's exit to take a deep breath of fresh air - he was finally freed from all encumbrances. |
Tony's Most Recent Bedmate 'Felicity' (or Deborah) (Felicity Buirski) Tony Blake (Oliver Tobias) Topless Fontaine Khaled (Joan Collins) - in Her Mansion's Elevator in a Love-Making Scene with Tony Molly (Minah Bird) to Tony: "Hey, you do this for a living, huh?" Vanessa and Fontaine Watching The Elevator Sex Videotape Alex Khaled (Emma Jacobs) - Fontaine's Scheming Stepdaughter Notorious Swimming Pool Orgy - Fontaine on Swing with Leonard Fontaine's Husband Discovering the Security Videotape of the Elevator Sex Sequence Last View of a Bloodied Tony After Being Beaten Up by Thugs at the Club - Taking a Breath of Fresh Air |
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An Unmarried Woman (1978) Director/writer Paul Mazursky's serious and groundbreaking (but dated) feminist film, a romantic drama, portrayed the character of a Upper East Side Manhattan wife who suddenly became insecure and "unmarried" when her long-standing marital relationship abruptly ended. The lengthy tagline foretold the plot:
It told the story of NYC mid-30s wife/mother and part-time Soho art-gallery worker Erica Benton (Oscar-nominated Jill Clayburgh) who was suddenly dumped by her stockbroker husband Martin (Michael Murphy) of sixteen years for a much younger woman, a schoolteacher. The film opened with a title sequence that was backgrounded by the couple during an early morning jog through parts of the Upper East Side of NYC near where they lived; Martin was quickly disgruntled after stepping in dog poop on the sidewalk with his expensive $35 dollar "sneakers" ("F--king city's turned into one big pile of dog s--t! Come on out and take a crap on me! Everybody else is!"); when she complained that he was about to smoke a cigarette, he criticized her - an ominous foreshadowing: "The longer I'm married to you, the more you sound like my mother." After making love ("a little quickie") in the bedroom before Martin left for work, she performed a giddy dance in only her T-shirt and panties, pretending that she was performing a pas de deux for "Swan Lake." That evening, she was casually nude as she changed her clothes and they chatted together in their bedroom. She was therefore entirely unprepared the next day after lunch together when he stopped on the street and began sobbing. She first asked: "Marty, Marty, come on, what is it, honey? What's the matter? What is this? What, tell me?" - he delivered a tearful admission about his year-long affair with another woman whom he met at Bloomingdale's: "I'm in love with somebody else. I'm seeing another woman, for over a year. At first, you know, I thought it was just a-a fling. But it isn't. I love her. I want to live with her. Oh God, I don't want to hurt you. I don't want to hurt Patti. But I-I can't...She's not a whore or anything. Her name's Marcia Brenner. She's, she's a teacher. She's twenty-six. I met her at Bloomingdale's, for Christ's sake. I was standin' there buying a shirt, you know, and she-she was standing next to me. She asked me if I liked this shirt that, uh, that she was buying for her father. Oh, God! I'm so sorry." Erica's first stunned words were to have him confess to their precocious 15 year-old daughter Patti (Lisa Lucas) attending private school: "You tell Patti, you tell Patti that you're sorry." Martin repeated: "I'm in love with her." Erica asked a stony question: "She a good lay?" and then fled down the street and soon vomited into a garbage can. Erica began to 'erase' Martin's memory (over 16 years of marriage) by removing his belongings and piling them into the living room, and also removing her gold-band wedding ring from her finger. After the breakup, she continued to meet regularly with her gossipy girlfriends at an upscale bar, including bitter, man-hating divorcee Elaine (Kelly Bishop), Sue (Patricia Quinn) who was barely tolerating her asexual marriage, and another middle-aged divorcee Jeanette (Linda Miller) engaged in an affair with a "very mature" 19-year-old still living at home with his parents, and admitted that she had an eye massage with him: "There ain't nothin' wrong with a good, old-fashioned eyeball orgasm." While seeking a divorce, she had a number of uncomfortable experiences including a "definite f--kin' pass" made at her by family physician Dr. Jacobs (Daniel Seltzer), who claimed he only invited her out for a drink. She sarcastically told others how it happened: "My husband left me for a younger woman. Ha, ha, ha....He was buying a shirt in Bloomingdale's and he fell in love." She felt depression, confusion, fear and loneliness, and was overwhelmed by having to see other men or to pursue dating, although she was open to it: "I'd risk it with some new men." A blind date with an infatuated and clueless Bob (Andrew Duncan) at a luncheon went poorly. In ongoing therapy with lesbian psychiatrist Tanya Berkel (Penelope Russianoff), she was advised to continue on with her life, and that it was OK to feel angry, jealous, and depressed, but not guilty ("I would like to see you... take a vacation from guilt"). In a difficult and argumentative meeting with Martin, he noticed her bitterness and asked: "How can you hate somebody that you were in love with for 16 years?" Feeling demeaned by the break-up, she snapped back that they had made love almost 2,000 times during their marriage: "Did you fall out of love with my, my flesh, my body, or me - with Erica? Did you fall out of love with Erica?...I was your hooker, Martin. I was a bright, high-priced, classy hooker. Upper East Side by way of Vassar hooker, but I was your hooker." She agreed to a one-night stand ("Take me to your loft, Charlie") with smooth, gold necklace-wearing co-worker and womanizing swinger Charlie (Cliff Gorman). At first, she nervously blurted out: "Charlie, let's just do it, okay? Now, before I change my mind." He set the terms for their relationship: "Let's just get something straight right off the top, babe, huh? I don't get involved with my women. I'm a short-term guy. I don't fall in love. I don't wanna get married.... The only thing you can count on me for is sex. I am what I am. I make no bones about it." And then she confided in him: "Charlie, I've only slept with one man in 17 years." He told her (as he felt her breasts) that she had a "beautiful body." Later, she found a more reciprocal loving relationship with handsome and respectful, divorced strong-willed English abstract artist Saul Kaplan (Alan Bates) and slept with him almost immediately, but noted that although the sex was "very good", it was "sort of empty": ("I just slept with a man that I barely know. I mean, casual sex is not my...I'm experimenting. I'm, well, I know it sounds a little cold, but that's the way it is these days. I just want to see how it feels to make love to someone that I'm not in love with") - she also added how she really felt: "As soon as the sex was over, I wanted to leave." Toward the conclusion of the film, Martin confessed to Erica that he had broken up with his mistress: "I broke up with Marcia...Well, the truth of it is she left me. I don't know. I mean, the minute I moved in there, we stopped having fun" - he asked to come back, but Erica refused: "It doesn't work that way, you know?" In the end (although she was "going steady" with Saul), she decided to part ways with him during the coming summer, when he proposed that she join him in Vermont. She finally realized that they were two very independent individuals, and she had to be in control of her life as an unmarried, self-fulfilling and independent woman. |
Erica Benton (Jill Clayburgh) With Husband Early in Morning After Sex Ballet Dancing After Martin Left Erica Later in Evening Casually in Bedroom With Husband Erica to Unhappy Husband Martin: "What is this? What, tell me?" Erica Dumped by Husband Conferring with Gossipy Girlfriends After Breakup (l to r): Elaine, Erica, Sue, Jeanette Consoling Her 15 Year Old Daughter Patti Erica's Removal of Martin's Belongings Martin's Confession That His Affair Had Ended |