1 review
From the outset, PMML! has been one of Girlfriends Films' stranger series, and this Part 7 is really out there.
Lacking continuity, so that the scenes even seem to be presented out of order or with contradictions from one to the next, the show starts off customarily with a three-minute recap of highlights from the previous episode.
Then the new action turns to focus on the series' original stars Lily Carter (as Hayden, curiously one of the few characters to receive an original name in the script) and her mom Zoey Holloway. Also getting a name is Prinzzess, playing a role as Felicity, given that she also uses the stage name Prinzzess Felicity Jade.
The aggressive behavior of Bree Daniels and other characters is inconsistent scene to scene, with the underlying theme of forcing girls to have Sapphic sex under the correct premise that becoming lesbians is their actual secret desire all along repeated several times. It is obvious that the Girlfriends Films' production line is devoted to getting individual vignettes in the can, and that stringing them together on a 4-segment DVD can be arbitrary and is not designed to make any sense overall.
Lacking continuity, so that the scenes even seem to be presented out of order or with contradictions from one to the next, the show starts off customarily with a three-minute recap of highlights from the previous episode.
Then the new action turns to focus on the series' original stars Lily Carter (as Hayden, curiously one of the few characters to receive an original name in the script) and her mom Zoey Holloway. Also getting a name is Prinzzess, playing a role as Felicity, given that she also uses the stage name Prinzzess Felicity Jade.
The aggressive behavior of Bree Daniels and other characters is inconsistent scene to scene, with the underlying theme of forcing girls to have Sapphic sex under the correct premise that becoming lesbians is their actual secret desire all along repeated several times. It is obvious that the Girlfriends Films' production line is devoted to getting individual vignettes in the can, and that stringing them together on a 4-segment DVD can be arbitrary and is not designed to make any sense overall.