Roommates _sitkaman repost.txt
This was the 271st post made to abdec. It was posted by Studly Gearhead on November 12, 2004.
I don't have any of the original NFO or cover files that might have posted with this film.
Produced in 1981. English. Run time of 1:28:51. DVD size of 4689.389568 MB.
This is a Video X Pix NTSC DVD.
Posted April 1, 2015 by sitkaman.
IAFD Data
http://www.iafd.com/title.rme/title=Roommates/year=1981/roommates.htm
Roommates (1981)
Distributor: Video-X-Pix
Compilation: No
Director: Chuck Vincent
Minutes: 89
All-Girl: No
All-Male: No
Actresses
Kelly Nichols
Samantha Fox
Veronica Hart
NonSex Performers
Cami Graham
Gloria Leonard
Margaret Smith
Margo Dumont (as Margot DuMont)
Merle Michaels
Patricia Dale
Actors
Bobby Astyr
Jack Wrangler
Jamie Gillis
Jerry Butler
John Christopher
Peter Johns
Don Peterson (as Phil Smith)
Ron Hudd
Ron Jeremy
Roy Stuart
NonSex Performers
Adam DeHaven
Ashley Moore
Rick Marx (as Earl Arno)
F. McKrell
Fred Rein (as Frederick Rein)
Frederick Foster (as Fredrick Foster)
Henri Pachard
Josh Andrews
Kurt Mann
Marco Nero
Scene Breakdowns
Scene 1. Veronica Hart, Don Peterson
Scene 2. Kelly Nichols, Ron Hudd
Scene 3. Veronica Hart, Don Peterson
Scene 4. Samantha Fox, Jack Wrangler
Scene 5. Kelly Nichols, Rick Marx, guy, Peter Johns, Roy Stuart
Scene 6. Kelly Nichols, Jamie Gillis
Scene 7. Samantha Fox, Ron Jeremy
Scene 8. Veronica Hart, Jerry Butler
Scene 9. Samantha Fox, Bobby Astyr
Honors and Awards
AFAA Awards, 1982 Winner: Best Actress, Veronica Hart
Winner: Best Supporting Actor, Jamie Gillis
Winner: Best Director, Chuck Vincent
Winner: Best Film, Chuck Vincent
Winner: Best Screenplay, Chuck Vincent
Winner: Best Director, Chuck Vincent
Winner: Best Actress, Veronica Hart
X-Rated: The Greatest Adult Movies of All Time, 2015 Winner: One of the Greatest Adult Films of All Time
Description from DVD Rear Cover
Roommates is...a totally unique film about three women whose livers become entwined as they share a N.Y. apartment. A landmark film, Roommates takes us inside these women's minds, hearts, and passions.
Roommates is...Billie (Samantha Fox) an ex-callgirl, gambling everything she has to find a new life. Billie is finding that to get a second chance, she has to fight for it.
Roommates is...Joan (Veronica Hart) fresh out of drama school and trying for Broadway. Young and naive, she's on her own for the first time, and growing up fast!
Roommates is...Sherry (Kelly Nichols) a beautiful California model about to discover N.Y.C. Shes's chasing every thrill, every high and moving closer to the edge. When she meets Joel (Jamie Gillis) Sherry finds she is fighting for her very life.
Roommates is...Three women, three lives at the turning point.
IMDb review
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0083007/reviews?ref_=tt_urv
Dirty Secrets of the Oh Yeah Sisterhood
9/10
Author: Dries Vermeulen (Nodriesrespect) from Brugge, Belgium
31 August 2007
The late Chuck Vincent's ultimate cross-over hit swept the AFAA (Adult Film Association of America, founded by Dave Friedman) Awards the year it came out, while simultaneously alienating a lot of porn fans and critics alike, perhaps already planting the seeds for what were to become such organizations as the XRCO (X-Rated Critics Organization) and FOXE (Fans of X-Rated Entertainment). The reason for this very controversy is blatantly obvious. While ROOMMATES delivers in spades in all aspects of good film-making (i.e. script, acting, production values), it virtually overlooks the one aspect that separates adult from mainstream movies. While there's plenty of sex involved, very little of it is actually erotic or indeed intended as such. "Cult Movies" auteur Danny Peary actually hit the nail on the head when he labeled the film borderline misogynist as its three female lead characters are put through the wringer just to show how strong and plucky they happen to be. That said, Vincent and his regular writer Rick Marx did manage to create a trio of gutsy (if not quite yet independent) women who were unapologetic about their penile pursuits that was totally different from the porn norm and this long before SEX AND THE CITY made such "female misbehavior" acceptable to mainstream audiences. Presumably the first adult film to play mainstream venues since Bill Osco's porn musical ALICE IN WONDERLAND in 1976 with varying degrees of explicitness, it was embraced by a spectator-ship well beyond the dyed in the wool dirty movie devotees.
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