Añade un argumento en tu idiomaThis is a serious attempt to look into the lives of three different woman that come together as roommates in New York. Each of them were attempting to step out of their old, abused selves an... Leer todoThis is a serious attempt to look into the lives of three different woman that come together as roommates in New York. Each of them were attempting to step out of their old, abused selves and start new lives. Although they try to support each other's goals, their old lives creep ... Leer todoThis is a serious attempt to look into the lives of three different woman that come together as roommates in New York. Each of them were attempting to step out of their old, abused selves and start new lives. Although they try to support each other's goals, their old lives creep back into their work, relationships, and apartment. They meet abusive men just as before. ... Leer todo
- Dirección
- Guión
- Reparto principal
- Premios
- 11 premios y 2 nominaciones en total
- Ken
- (as Phil Smith)
- Girl at Party with Meg
- (as Patricia Dale)
- Lou De Sapio
- (as Fredrick Foster)
Reseñas destacadas
Three title characters are Billie (Samantha Fox), an ex-call girl working in tv commercials production, taking Joan (Veronica Hart) and Sherry (Kelly Nichols) as roommates from out of town to share her posh Manhattan apartment. Amidst humorous and frankly sentimental incidents, film concentrates on the women's mistreatment by various men in their lives.
Billie suffers from sexual harassment on the job, as her boss (Bobby Astyr) insists that she dispense sexual favors to clients or he'll fire her. Joan, dropping out of drama school to try and make it on (or off) Broadway, has a romance with her drama prof, but he drops her in favor of renewing his relationship with his wife. Sherry is from L. A. and building a modeling career, but gets beaten and abused by men she picks up.
Despite the melodramatic format, Vincent and his co- writer Rick Marx find positive elements for the heroines, such as Joan's falling in love with a sympathetic fellow actor (Jerry Butler), and even contrive a happy ending as each one embarks on a new life style, drawing upon the lessons they've learned. What makes the picture work is sock performances, particularly Samantha Fox's tough portrayal of a woman trying to "go straight" and Veronica Hart's winsome and innocent bundle of energy. Kelly Nichols is stuck in a less convincing role, that of a woman self-destructing through drugs and random men, but her glamorous beauty and a torrid sex scene (in stop-motion photography) are arresting.
In support, Jamie Gillis is truly frightening as a sickie who dominates Nichols, Gloria Leonard provides an hilarious, wise-cracking cameo as Fox's former madam, and Jerry Butler is very sympathetic as Hart's new boyfriend. Tech credits are sharp, especially Larry Revene's varied lighting to enhance each scene's mood.
While pic's lack of a Hollywood major pedigree may lead to it being dismissed as porn, "Roommates" deserves a shot at mainstream audiences.
It's easy to see why. It's an engaging girls-about-town drama that boasts convincing performances and a believable series of conflicts which are truthfully resolved by an exciting conclusion.
Samantha Fox, Veronica hart and Kelly Nichols are the three female leads; all had appeared in countless X-rated features prior to this. Hart, now directing quality porn under the name Jane Hamilton, impresses greatly as a budding actress in a loveless relationship; she's natural and very attractive.
Vincent regular Larry Revene photographed the pic while Vincent and regular scripter Rick Marx shared the screenplay.
In order to beat the high cost of living in New York, three very different but equally career-oriented women decide to move in together. Billie (Samantha Fox in a career-best performance) is an up 'n' coming advertising executive with a past in high-priced prostitution that's coming back to haunt her with a vengeance. Struggling actress Joan (Veronica Hart) wants to make it big on Broadway but carries on an affair with a married man (tall, hulking Frank Adams, a beefy Brian Keith type who was also in Vincent's GAMES WOMEN PLAY and THIS LADY IS A TRAMP). Model Sherry (Kelly Nichols) has a coke habit that invariably gets her in trouble including gang rape and a persistent pervert, disturbingly portrayed by who else but Jamie Gillis. Of the three, Joan gets off the easiest, just having to cope with being strung along by her lying lover and her budding attraction to gay fellow actor Eddie, one of the first parts that allowed the excellent Jerry Butler to flex his acting muscles. As Billie is blackmailed by her former pimp Marv (a rare nasty turn from that terrific comedian Bobby Astyr) to resume her previous capacity as a hooker lest he blow her cover, she winds up at the bachelor party of her lover Jim (Jack Wrangler, JACK 'N' JILL together again), adding insult to injury as she had no idea that he was about to marry someone else ! And so it goes. Just about every single sexual encounter has one character (usually male) forcing or willfully deluding the other (usually female), leaving an unpleasant aftertaste. Exceptions are Sherry's popper-fueled one night stand with Ron Hudd, shot and edited in stuttering MTV style (then not yet the overworked device it has become since), and Joan's tender initiation of the sexually confused Eddie. Veronica Hart has gone on record to claim that her scene with Jerry Butler here was the only time on-screen sex ever felt like actual lovemaking to her.
Like Chuck's own follow-up IN LOVE and a few other titles like Stephen Sayadian's CAFE FLESH or Larry Revene's RAW TALENT, ROOMMATES falls into that severely limited category of adult movies that keep resurfacing on people's "best of" lists even though they're not all that hot. Each of them is very well made however with acting that puts the industry standard to shame. Hey, credit where it's due. Fox, Hart and Nichols were all Vincent discoveries to some extent in BAD PENNY, GAMES WOMEN PLAY and BON APPETIT respectively so it's particularly pleasing to find the three of them together in the one such case where they received equal billing and screen time. The director's right hand man behind the camera, the aforementioned Revene, performs his customary sterling duties plus there's a hauntingly wistful theme song ("Not Another Love Affair") by the same guys who wrote the slushy theme for IN LOVE. Had Vincent turned up the heat a notch, ROOMMATES would really be the adult classic "everyone" keeps saying it is.
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- ConexionesFeatured in Wrangler: Anatomía de un icono (2008)