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Top
Lesbian Film Reviews
Page
5 of 5
Page
1: Aimee
& Jaguar to Clair of the Moon

Page 2: Daphine to Gia

Page 3: A Girl Thing to Looking
For Cheyenne

Page 4: Lost and Delirous to Serving
in Silence

Page
5: The Sex Monster to Wild SIde
The
Sex Monster (1999, 97 min, US)
Director: Mike Binder Studio: Trimark
Starring: Mike Binder, Mariel Hemingway, Renée Humphrey,
Taylor Nichols, Missy Crider, Christopher Lawford, Joanna
Heimbold, Kevin Pollak, Stephen Baldwin
REVIEW:
This sex comedy centers on the premise: What if you convinced
your wife to have a ménage-a-trois and she liked it
so much you find yourself sleeping on the couch? Mariel Hemingway
stars as a quietly contented wife, Laura, whose libido is
set afire after she reluctantly agrees to allow another women
in bed with her and her husband. Laura's long pent-up lesbian
desires explode into a frenzy of kisses, grinding, and other
oral pleasuring, and all of this action leaves poor Marty
the odd man out.

More info on The
Sex Monster

Amazing Dreams Short-Short Review:
The
Sex Monster
LOVE THIS MOVIE!! Mariel Hemingway making out with women,
all kinds of women, what more could you want? I watch it every
time it comes on cable. Some really funny parts, and any man
who has ever entertained a threesome with his wife or GF should
watch this film before doing so.
***** |
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She
Must Be Seeing Things (1988, 85 min, US)
Director: Sheila McLaughlin Studio: First Run Features
Starring: Sheila Dabney, Lois Weaver
REVIEW:
This interesting love story follows the rocky relationship
of Agatha, a New York lawyer, and Jo, a filmmaker. While Jo
is out of town, Agatha comes upon her diary and photos, which
suggest that she is developing an interest in men and may
be unfaithful to her. Agatha's growing jealousy and her frantic
attempts to keep her wavering lover interested result in her
donning men's clothing and spying on her unsuspecting partner.

More info on
She Must Be Seeing Things

Amazing Dreams Short-Short Review:
She
Must Be Seeing Things
Didn't see it, but sounds interesting.
? |
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Show
Me Love (1998, 89 min, Sweden)
Director: Lukas Moodysson Studio: Strand Releasing
Starring: Alexandra Dahlstrom, Rebecca Liljeberg, Erica Carlson,
Mathias Rust, Stefan Horberg, Josefin Nyberg
REVIEW:
This comedic, romantic Swedish drama is set in the backwater
town Amal and follows teenager Agnes (Liljeberg), a serious,
dark-haired high school outsider who secretly falls in love
with the carefree Elin (Dahlstrom), one of the cool in
girls. Agnes is a troubled baby dyke who needs a hand. How
Elin reaches out to the other teen and how their friendship
turns to a relationship is told in a sympathetic, uplifting,
and wonderfully romantic fashion. (Swedish with English subtitles).

More info on
Show Me Love

Amazing Dreams Short-Short Review:
Show
Me Love
Didn't see it, but sounds like a great one for young women
who are coming out.
? |
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Some
Prefer Cake (1997, 94 min, US)
Studio: Wolfe
Cast: Kathleen Fontaine, Tara Howley, Desi Del Valle, Machiko
Saito
Director: Heidi Arnesen, Jeannie Kahaney
REVIEW:
An appetizing and seductive comedy that centers around the
friendship and tangled love lives of two young San Francisco
women: the aspiring comedian and sexually carefree lesbian
Kira (Kathleen Fontaine) and her best friend Sydney (Tara
Howley), an insecure food-obsessed straight woman. With only
stage fright keeping her from a successful stand-up comedy
career, the dark-haired beauty Kira drowns her professional
problems by bedding a bevy of nearly nameless babes. With
all the gory bedroom details recounted later to the rapt attention
to her best friend Sydney, a gal who'd rather eat her sweets
than to bother with a relationship. But just when Kira thinks
she's fallen in love (with the lovely Desi del Valle) she
finds herself stalked (in that Alex from Fatal Attraction
fashion) by Katie (Machiko Saito), a deranged and delusional
former one-night conquest. Will she find inspiration and stability
in a relationship or will the calculating Katie have her way?
A delirious mix of sexual entanglements, heady melodrama and
tender humor.

More info on Some
Prefer Cake

Amazing Dreams Short-Short Review:
Some
Prefer Cake
Didn't see it, but sounds like fun.
?
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Sugar
Sweet (2001, 67 min, Japan)
Studio: Wolfe
Cast: Saori Kitagawa, C. Snatch Z, Saki
Director: Desiree Lim
Screenwriter: Desiree Lim y
Three urban Japanese dykes frolic in a sex-charged love triangle
that brings glamour to their mundane lives.
REVIEW:
Trapped between the necessity of making ends meet and
her repressed artistic desires, Naomi is not only a filmmaker
who has been hired to direct a reality-based TV dating show,
but she also makes lesbian porn. She soon clashes with both
her producers and her dyke friends. Her only link to sanity
is a clandestine cyber romance she is having with a mystery
woman named Sugar. For her first television show, Naomi recruits
her free-spirited best friend Azusa, who is looking for adventure
outside her tedious relationship, and the seductive Miki,
an office manager by day and go-go dancer by night. As the
show is being taped, the triangle takes shape! Azusa thinks
she is falling in love with Miki, and Miki becomes attracted
to Naomi!
Sugar Sweet is a fun, sexually charged romp through Japan's
metropolis with plenty of eye candy, innuendos, fantasy, vibrators,
strap-ons, and nipple clamps. The vivid dyke underground is
steeped in exotic women, fetish foreplay, and safe sex, but
director Desiree Lim skillfully blends eroticism with romanticism.
Each character experiences the ebbs and flows of the game
of love, and not without some playfulness along the way.
(Japanese with English subtitles).

More info on Sugar
Sweet |
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Therese
and Isabelle (1968, 102 min, France)
Director: Radley Metzger Studio: First Run//Image
Starring: Essy Persson, Anna Gael, Barbara Laage, Anne Vernon
REVIEW:
Set in an all-girls' Catholic boarding school, this milestone
film is a tender glimpse at the erotic affair of two young
women. Unlike many other works of the period, this provocative
drama offers a non-exploitative picture of budding female
sexuality, some very hot love scenes, and lots of schoolgirl
emotional tension. (French with English subtitles).

More info on
Therese and Isabelle

Amazing Dreams Short-Short Review:
Threse
and Isabelle
Didn't see it, but would like to do so.
?
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Thin
Ice (1995, 88 min, GB)
Director: Fiona Cunningham Reid Studio: Wolfe
Starring: Sabra Willams, Charlotte Avery
REVIEW:
When black photographer and amateur skater (Williams) loses
her bed and skating partner shortly before competing in the
1994 Gay Games competition, she begins a desperate search
for a suitable replacement. She thinks she finds one in Nathalie
(Avery), a young straight woman and skating novice.
While the two fine-tune their technique on the ice, they also
begin a romance that proves to be just as difficult to master.
A heart-warming romantic comedy.

More info on
Thin Ice

Amazing Dreams Short-Short Review:
Thin
Ice
Didn't see it, but would like to do so.
?
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Three
of Hearts (1993, 101 min, US)
Director: Yurek Bogayevicz Studio: Turner
Starring: Sherilyn Fenn, Kelly Lynch, William Baldwin, Joe
Pantoliano
REVIEW:
Stung by her sudden breakup with Ellen (Sherilyn Fenn), the
lovelorn Connie (Kelly Lynch) concocts a wild plan for reconciliation.
She hires male hustler Joey (William Baldwin) to seduce and
abandon Ellen, breaking her heart so Connie can get her back
on the rebound. Though not the breakthrough Hollywood lesbian
film it promised to be, veering into the comforting embrace
of heterosexuality, it is still remarkably charming and far
from a complete failure in dealing with lesbian issues.

More info on
Three of Hearts

Amazing Dreams Short-Short Review:
Three
of Hearts
Sad. Woman with woman, strays for man, la, la, la--the woman
who plays the Drag King on L Word, Kelly Lynch, is in this
film.
*** |
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The
Virgin Machine (1988, 85 min, Germany)
Director: Monika Treut Studio: First Run Features
Starring: Ina Blum, Susie Bright
REVIEW:
This
thought-provoking sexual odyssey tells the story of a young
West German woman and her search for romantic love.
Frustrated by the emptiness of her native Hamburg, Dorothee
decides to flee her home to search for her mother, who is
living in San Francisco. Once arrived, however, her trek
turns into a process of sexual discovery. Filmed in a steamy
black and white, the film exudes a sensuality in which simple
lust is transformed into glorious eroticism. (English and
German with English subtitles).

More info on
The Virgin Machine

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Tick
Tock Lullaby (2007, 73 min, Great Britain)
Studio: Wolfe
Starring: David Lazenby, Jake Canuso, Joanna Bending, Lisa
Gornick, Matthew Parish, Raquel Cassidy, Sam Spruell, Sarah
Patterson, William Bowry
Director: Lisa Gornick
Screenwriter: Lisa Gornick
A playful cartoon artist and her sassy partner have settled
into a comfortable domesticity in their London flat, though
something has begun to alarm them -- their biological clocks!
REVIEW:
Sasha questions whether she wants something more out of life
than her carefree routine of work, friends and urbane leisure.
Envying the straight couples who Maya and Sasha think have
it easy, the women set out to experience the spontaneity of
an unexpected pregnancy. What better way than to go cruising
the streets of London for the ideal sperm donor? Enter dark
and handsome Laurence, with whom Sasha becomes intertwined
in her quest for a seed, and things get really interesting.
Along the way, other baby dramas are woven through the dyke
couple's story. Moody Fiona is hesitant to conceive with her
passive husband Todd, while Gillian, Fiona's sister, prowls
the city's bars for potential daddies (who also happen to
become the subjects of her erotic photographs). Clever writer/director
Lisa Gornick (Do I Love You?) scores with her upbeat second
feature that uses delicate pacing, subtle and wry dialogue
and a naturalistic style to bring the complex inner lives
of her characters to life. Tick Tock Lullaby brings a sexy,
witty edge to the debate over what it means to be a gay parent.
-- Maggie Boccella.

More info on Tick
Tock Lullaby |
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Tipping
the Velvet (2002, 178 min, Great Britain)
Director: Geoffrey Sax, Acorn Media
Starring: Rachael Stirling, Keeley Hawes, Anna Chancellor,
Jodhi May, Hugh Bonneville, Johnny Vegas, Alexei Sayle, John
Bowe, Sally Hawkins
REVIEW:
Tipping the Velvet is a stunning tour-de-force lesbian romantic
drama in grand BBC style with fabulous music, costumes, acting,
language, story and yes -- sex. Nan Astley (Stirling) is a
sweet girl who shucks oysters in her parent's Whitstable oyster
parlor. One night she accompanies her family and boyfriend,
with whom she is not smitten, to the vaudeville show. On stage
she is entranced by the site of male impersonator, Kitty Butler
(Hawes). After weeks her stares come to Kitty's attention,
and Nan is summoned backstage. When Kitty asks her to become
her dresser, she readily complies. Just a small touch of Kitty
sends her reeling. This powerful BBC drama is both a frank
depiction of lesbianism and a witty and moving account of
a young woman who will win your heart while searching for
her own.

More info on
Tipping the Velvet

Amazing Dreams Short-Short Review:
Tipping
the Velvet
Gorgeous Movie, incredible costumes, great love story.
**** |
|
The
Truth About Jane (2001, 91 min, US)
Director: Lee Rose, Studio: Starlight Home Entertainment
Starring: Stockard Channing, Alicia Lagano, Kelly Rowan, Ellen
Muth, James Naughton, RuPaul
REVIEW:
Jane (Muth) appears to be like any other teenage girl, except
to herself. The cutest boy in the class flirts with her, but
all she feels is the dull ache of attraction for the adorable
new girl in class, Taylor (Lagano). Jane's mom (Stockard Channing)
assumes that her daughter is just like any other fifteen-year-old
girl, confused about her adolescence.
Fifteen-year-old Jane lives the quintessential suburban life
with her parents and younger brother (whom she can't stand).
Although popular, Jane has always felt somewhat different
than her peers. However, after meeting Taylor, a transfer
student at school, Jane's life changes irrevocably. Jane and
Taylor become close friends very quickly, and Jane feels a
connection to Taylor that she's never felt with her other
friends. One night, Taylor kisses Jane, and it becomes clear
to Jane that she's found what has been lacking in her life.

More info on
The Truth About Jane

Amazing Dreams Short-Short Review:
The
Truth About Jane
Good coming out story. Woman who stars in Dead Like Me is
in this film.
**** |
|
A
Woman Like Eve (1979, 100 min, Netherlands)
Director: Noichka van Brakel
Starring: Maria Schneider, Monique Van De Ven
REVIEW:
This sensitive drama stars Monique Van De Ven as Eve, whose
secure but unhappy marriage ends in divorce when she finds
fulfillment in the arms of a free-spirited lesbian folk singer
played by Maria Schneider. An early European effort at a positive
portrayal of lesbians, which was made by a production crew
made up primarily of women.
(This video is currently out of print and is not available
for sale, but may be found for rent.)

More info on
A Woman Like Eve

Amazing Dreams Short-Short Review:
A
Woman Like Eve
Didn't see it, but would like to do so.
? |
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When
Night Is Falling (1994, 96 min, Canada)
Director: Patricia Rozema Studio: Wolfe
Starring: Pascale Bussières, Rachael Crawford, Henry
Czerny
REVIEW:
Camille (Pascale Bussières) is a Christian academician
romantically involved with Martin (Henry Czerny), a nice enough
fellow teacher more interested in advancement than romance.
Camille's repressed emotions and desire for true love come
to the surface after she meets flamboyant circus performer
Petra (Rachael Crawford). Despite being opposites, the two
are attracted to each other. Initially denying her sexual
attraction to the exotic African-Canadian Petra, Camille plays
a repetitive game of I want you, no, I don't that
is, until Camille finally unleashes her pent-up desires in
one of the more sexually charged lesbian love scenes ever
filmed.

More info on
When Night is Falling

Amazing Dreams Short-Short Review:
When
Night is Falling
Sweet film about a repressed teacher falling for a wild circus
performer. The dog scene was a bit distrubing, but the filming
was beautiful, especially the trapeze artists, and the women
were lovely, and we give it a big 4 stars!
**** |
|
Wild
Side (1995, 96 min, US)
Director: Franklin Brauner Studio: Pioneer
Starring: Christopher Walken, Anne Heche, Steven Bauer, Joan
Chen
REVIEW:
This torrid love story is packaged in the guise of a standard
straight-to-video soft-core action/thriller. Anne Heche is
Alex Lee, a banker by day and a high-class hooker by night.
Both of her careers are sent in a tailspin after a $1,500
tryst with Bruno Buckingham (Christopher Walken), a bug-eyed,
high-living businessman with criminal intentions. An elegant
and gorgeous Joan Chen is Virginia Chow, Bruno's wife, who
meets and immediately is attracted to the beautiful Alex.
Before she realizes it, Alex is caught up in a plot to inject
a computer virus into the national banking system, is a pawn
of a sex-crazed FBI man, and in love (with Virginia) for the
first time. This is an action/thriller that is actually a
lesbian wet dream in disguise. .

More info on
Wild Side

Amazing Dreams Short-Short Review:
Wild
Side
Love this one, but then we love Christopher Walken. The sex
scene between Joan Chen and Ellen's ex, Anne Heche, is hotter
than hades. We saw Oprah interviewing Anne Heche and saying
"You NEVER thought about being a lesbian BEFORE you met
Ellen?" Thinking Oprah must have seen this movie, because
we sure didn't believe that load of crap either.
**** |
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Page
5 of 5
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2, Page 3, Page
4, Page 5
HOW
TO BE A HAPPY LESBIAN:
A COMING OUT GUIDE
©2008 by Amazing Dreams Publishing
All rights reserved.
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