(I) (1976)

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6/10
One old man and a gaggle of blonde's
Wolfgang_Rodenbach24 November 2009
Warning: Spoilers
Mitch and Anne (Jacques Insermini & Emmanuelle Parèze) enjoy picking up young women on the beach to have threesomes at their mansion during the weekend. First they spend all day on the beach picking out a target, then Anne introduces herself to their guinea pig and tries her out on Monday when Mitch is at the office. Their main squeeze for the duration of this film is Beatrice (Chantal Naura aka Chantal Nora). Anne and Beatrice hit it off and start taking pictures of each other while still at the beach. If this were a contemporary flick, they would be sending these pictures to Anne's better half immediately, but since it was made in 1976, he has to spend his time fantasizing about Beatrice on his own and taking it out (verbaly) on an old lady at work. Also at the office for no particular reason are two of Mitch's former conquests, one of whom is the shamefully underused (as in no sex scenes) Martine Grimaud.

In one of those typical plot twists that can only happen in this genre, Mitch welcomes a new female boarder into the spare room. Then two slutty twins (Catherine and Marie-Pierre Castel) arrive wearing rather preposterous platinum blonde wigs to have a private party with our main man. It is obvious by now that he has a thing for blonde's. And yes, you guessed it, the new boarder also joins in to make it a foursome. Meanwhile Anne and Beatrice are still out and about and find time for some lesbian love in the park. However, the much anticipated meeting between the main three characters gets postponed by Mitch because he's picked up yet another platinum blonde. What is it about this guy? He's old, ugly, out of shape and has an unpleasant personality. Still, the women keep throwing themselves at him. In fact, he's the only male 'performer' in the entire film, if you catch my drift.

So, the two ladies end up watching a bit of 'La Foire Aux Sexes' at an adult cinema before sneaking into the bathroom with a dildo. Meanwhile, its Anne's hubbies turn to visit the forest with his white haired lady friend (the day to night ratio is only slight less screwed up than in an Ed Wood production). When Mitch finally arrives back home after his motorcycle trip, he naturally finds Anne and Beatrice ready and waiting for him in the bathroom. A instructs B exactly how she should pleasure 'their' husband, barking orders to the younger female all the way. After this the proceedings turn into one long montage of threesomes in and around the pool of the mansion over the weekend. The girls wear nothing more than imitation Hawaiian flower leis and there are several great big close-up of the old fat man's member in rest. For a coda, the trio goes off to fish on the beach when Beatrice's boyfriend (Stephane Bruno) suddenly shows up to fetch her. Very convenient for the older couple, as the moment Beatrice is gone, they spy their next blond victim sunbathing in a deckchair. It's a miracle they never made a sequel.

6 out of 10
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9/10
Rules of the Game
Nodriesrespect27 June 2009
Among erstwhile French porn production and distribution behemoth Alpha France's roster of in-house directors, Jean Desvilles a/k/a "Georges Fleury" remains frequently overlooked in favor of his more flamboyant colleagues like Gérard Kikoïne and the late Francis Leroi. Though his work's easily on a par with that of Jean-Claude Roy (a/k/a "Patrick Aubin") and Claude Bernard-Aubert (a/k/a "Burd Tranbaree"), whose style it most closely resembles, a more frugal output has him playing distant second fiddle even to those lust epic laborers. Having since gained notoriety as a surreal painter and set designer and all but disowned his shady porno past, historical accuracy commands his recognition as perpetrator of the legendary carnal company's first bona fide production, 1972's soft-core JEUX POUR COUPLES INFIDELES, though a persistent rumor attributes the flick's expertly orchestrated sex scenes to chairman Francis Mischkind. Desvilles dove into dirty movies after a couple of crime dramas – LA ROSE ET LE REVOLVER and LES ANGES, both of which bombed at the box office – and never looked back, at least before the decade drew to a close.

Lensed in 1975, a halcyon year for Continental 'core before the French government tried to discourage a budding industry with gargantuan taxes, INTRODUCTIONS was one of the early flagship titles for Alpha France, further testament to Mischkind's faith in the director's abilities, with grosses to rival those generated by Claude Mulot's contemporary SEXE QUI PARLE. While latter film remains etched in the carnal connoisseur's collective memory however, Desvilles' early contribution has seemingly slipped through the cracks. The company, reincarnated as DVD distributor Blue One, now attempts to rectify this oversight by releasing a sterling transfer as part of a value for money "Georges Fleury" triple bill along with FANTAISIES POUR COUPLES and PARTIES RAIDES, the latter memorably shown stateside as THE NIBBLERS, distributed by Dave Friedman who reportedly won the flick in a high stakes poker game !

Anne and Michel are a middle-aged couple of considerable means, the wife staying behind in the swanky coastal resort of Deauville while her husband slaves at his Paris office during the week. She uses this personal time to set up the sexual scenario for the upcoming weekend, patiently ensnaring the participant of Michel's choice, in this case the alluring Béatrice, played by lovely Chantal Naura, a Desvilles mainstay who also appeared in Aubin's BOUCHE-TROU. The movie leisurely cuts back 'n' forth between the incomparable Emmanuelle Parèze luring her inexperienced yet eager prey and the portly Jacques Insermini working his way through the frivolous floozies populating the City of Lights. A sophisticated comedienne of what the French elegantly refer to as a "certain age", Parèze effortlessly commands the screen, creating believable matrimonial chemistry with Insermini, who would again portray her spouse in Mulot's end of the world erotic epic SHOCKING! which serves as an undisputed highlight in both their careers. Her comic talent was mined most effectively however by Tranbaree who would feature her in LA FESSEE, LA RABATTEUSE and VEUVES EN CHALEUR. Hardly looking the part of a porno stud, but impressively efficient in this capacity nonetheless, Insermini had a massive track record in simulated sex cinema, often cast as a gangster or a heavy because of his imposing physique, frequently found in the films of recently rediscovered auteur Jean-Marie Pallardy including his ambitious L'AMOUR AUX TROUSSES and the silly guilty pleasure L'ARRIERE-TRAIN SIFFLERA TROIS FOIS. To the porno patron, he should be most familiar as one of the garbage men mauling the stunning Nadja Mons in Mulot and Michel Barny's marvelous MES NUITS AVEC… a/k/a THE KINKY LADIES OF BOURBON STREET.

For genre film fans, this offers the rare opportunity to see both Castel twins from the Jean Rollin movies do hardcore, rather than just Cathy who was more accustomed to this line of work. Perky blonde Danièle Nègre, who was a saucy secretary in Serge Korber's underrated VIE SENTIMENTALE DE WALTER PETIT, plays the Swedish hitchhiker Michel picks up en route. Brunette Eva Khris appeared in Korber's A BOUT DE SEXE and Max Pécas' landmark FELICIA. Here she turns up as the new lodger at the couple's Paris apartment, eagerly partaking in the Castels' charms as they're alternately plowed by Insermini.

Naturally, any adult film made three and a half decades ago is bound to show its age to some extent in terms of fashions and hairstyles, perhaps most distractingly in the overwhelming presence of the polyester wigs made popular by Brigitte Bardot. The eroticism stands the test of time however, Desvilles taking his time to tease and titillate viewers in an unrushed approach that elevates this movie well above most of its carnal contemporaries. Sharing its bourgeois milieu with the oeuvre of Tranbaree, it cheerfully chucks his inherent hypocrisy by presenting the middle class protagonists as comfortably liberated libertines. Downside to this is a relative lack of conflict which might have made the movie more dramatically interesting. Production proves far more lavish than anything on the other side of the Atlantic at the same time with exquisite cinematography by veteran DoP Pierre Petit, who had amusingly shot the pious documentary LA VIE DE Jesus as far back as 1952 before descending into slightly risqué fare with Ralph Habib's CLUB DE FEMMES and Christian-Jaque's Martine Carol costume vehicle LES AMOURS DE LADY HAMILTON. An eclectic soundtrack's provided by legit French (if German-born) jazz pianist Eddie Warner, whose voluminous back catalog was regularly plundered by skin merchants including the aforementioned Pallardy and the late Lucien Hustaix for his highly lucrative if not very good LES JOUISSEUSES.
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