Director Paul Thomas and writer David Stanley tem up for a tepid Vivid release starring Janine Lindemulder. It's fallen deservedly into obscurity.
Central story gimmick is merely a swtich on the familiar male chauvinist action: this time we have female employees Sydnee Steele and Alexandra Silk competing in a dumb contest of which one can sleep with the most male co-workers. Janine is a new hire, so after running out of men they compete to see who can seduce her first.
Because Janine ruled for several years at Vivid as a superstar who only shot girl/girl scenes, this is typical of how that fact complicated the stories for her movies. Stanley fails to solve that problem, and there is little here of any interest. Movie's only worthwhile tocuh is puttina a brief spolight on a mature (50-something) actress Sharon Wood, who plays the company's number one secretary, and is forced to have a lesbian threesome at the film's climax, though Stanley' esolution of this subplot is confusing and phony.
Central story gimmick is merely a swtich on the familiar male chauvinist action: this time we have female employees Sydnee Steele and Alexandra Silk competing in a dumb contest of which one can sleep with the most male co-workers. Janine is a new hire, so after running out of men they compete to see who can seduce her first.
Because Janine ruled for several years at Vivid as a superstar who only shot girl/girl scenes, this is typical of how that fact complicated the stories for her movies. Stanley fails to solve that problem, and there is little here of any interest. Movie's only worthwhile tocuh is puttina a brief spolight on a mature (50-something) actress Sharon Wood, who plays the company's number one secretary, and is forced to have a lesbian threesome at the film's climax, though Stanley' esolution of this subplot is confusing and phony.