SYNOPSICS
A Woman's Deeper Journey Into Sex (2015) is a English movie. Sally McKenzie has directed this movie. Heidi Fleiss,Lizzie Ballinger,Fayr Barkley,Jennifer Berman are the starring of this movie. It was released in 2015. A Woman's Deeper Journey Into Sex (2015) is considered one of the best Documentary,History movie in India and around the world.
A Woman's Deeper Journey Into Sex follows Private Detective Lacey's quest to determine whether women need emotional connection for good sex. As Lacey travels from Australia to North America, the UK and Jamaica, she investigates women paying for sex, rent-a-dreads, women's uptake of porn and romance dependency. She also dips into her Dictionary intermittently on matters such as women's social history. With memorable characters including ex-Hollywood madam Heidi Fleiss, porn star Jesse Jane, Miss Cougar International and a range of ordinary women, this fast-paced film, written in verse, blends documentary, drama, animation and graphics to peep into the world of female sexuality.
A Woman's Deeper Journey Into Sex (2015) Reviews
Fast-paced
I'm not sure what to make of this documentary. It's fast-paced and makes full use of various video effects in whatever editing program was used. A few minutes into the doco I thought the editing was corny, as if a beginner was playing with whatever effects were available with little thought as to suitability. Then I began to think that, no, they knew what they were doing, and purposely wanted to convey the frenzied, kitchy look. Regarding the look, I'm undecided: amateurs, or confident professionals imitating amateurs? The narrator, also the writer and director, has a commanding presence, telling the story from the point of view of a private eye who travels the world in search of evidence that women need romance, involvement, to enjoy sex. The story is told largely in rhyme. I think the doco works, but I'm not sure. As a novice video editor myself, I wanted to view it a second time to concentrate on the editing, see what I could learn, but other than streaming it, I couldn't find a DVD or Blu-ray copy to purchase. Strange. People spend a whole lot of time and money on a doco and release it only to TV? Seems a waste to me.
HARD SLOG
Indie filmmaking is tough - often brutal. No budget to pull you out of a hole - actors or, in the case of a doco, interviewees who don't show - or get bolshie and miffed. No 2nd AD bringing you cups of tea and having to second guess 300 things a day, cos you're crew is miniscule. Sal McKenzie did a great job on this one. She's great to watch and is quietly persuasive, penetrating and gets the answers she's sleuthing for. I reckon this is a goodie.