Roy Karch, considered an industry great by his peers, is actually just a competent hack, as evidenced by this typical Adam & Eve feature he shot in 2001. There's nothing wrong with its Couples premise of a duo who are drifting apart due to the burden of friends having moved into their home (no good deed goes unpunished) but writer-director Karch goes nowhere from there.
So we have a couple of sex scenes featuring busty blonde bombshells of the era Candi Cotton and Brooke Hunter, both playing friends of our stars Ava Vincent and Mickey G., as well as an extraneous sex scene with another Ava pal played by obscuro actress Keli Muse, saddled with an uppity and unappealing mate Kyle Stone (an actor far better in NonSex assignments). Pat ending has Mickey & Ava reinvigorated merely because their "Man Who Came to Dinner" type house guests Steve Hatcher and Julia Phillips have exited.
To say this film has lapsed into obscurity is an understatement; I had to add it to IMDb this week, missing in action from the database 15 years after its initial release.
So we have a couple of sex scenes featuring busty blonde bombshells of the era Candi Cotton and Brooke Hunter, both playing friends of our stars Ava Vincent and Mickey G., as well as an extraneous sex scene with another Ava pal played by obscuro actress Keli Muse, saddled with an uppity and unappealing mate Kyle Stone (an actor far better in NonSex assignments). Pat ending has Mickey & Ava reinvigorated merely because their "Man Who Came to Dinner" type house guests Steve Hatcher and Julia Phillips have exited.
To say this film has lapsed into obscurity is an understatement; I had to add it to IMDb this week, missing in action from the database 15 years after its initial release.