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Subject: Repost of abdec post #362 Up 'n Coming _sitkaman repost.txt posted by Oliver Klozoff on Feb15, 2005 (1/1)
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Up 'n Coming _sitkaman repost.txt
This was the 362nd post made to abdec. It was posted by Oliver Klozoff on February 15, 2005.
I don't have any of the original NFO or cover files that might have posted with this film.
Produced in 1982. English. Run time of 1:24:07. DVD size of 3855.405056 MB.
This is an i-candy Entertainment Inc. NTSC DVD.
Posted July 22, 2015 by sitkaman.
IAFD Data
http://www.iafd.com/title.rme/title=up+%27n+coming/year=1982/up-'n-coming.htm
Up 'n Coming (1982)
Also Known As:Cassie
Distributor: Caballero Home Video
Compilation:No
Director: Godfrey Daniels
Minutes: 86
All-Girl: No
All-Male: No
Actresses
Cody Nicole [LezOnly]
Lili Marlene [Anal Facial A2M]
Lisa De Leeuw (as Lisa DeLeeuw)
Loni Sanders (as Loni Saunders)
Marilyn Chambers [Anal Facial]
Tina Marie (as Tiny Mary) [LezOnly]
NonSex Performers
Brandee (as Brandy)
Donna Capris
Margaret Raines
Monique Gabrielle (as Monique)
Actors
Steve Douglas (as Doug Rossi)
Ferris Weal
Herschel Savage
Marc Wallice (as Jay B. David)
John Holmes (as John C. Holmes)
Richard Pacheco
Tom Byron (as Tom Byrom)
NonSex Performers
Clay Tanning
John Lazar (as John La Zar)
Winston Cleet
Scene Breakdowns
Scene 1. Marilyn Chambers, Herschel Savage
Scene 2. Loni Sanders, Marc Wallice
Scene 3. Marilyn Chambers, Steve Douglas, Tom Byron
Scene 4. Cody Nicole, Marilyn Chambers
Scene 5. Lisa De Leeuw, Tina Marie, Ferris Weal
Scene 6. Marilyn Chambers, Richard Pacheco
Scene 7. Lili Marlene, Marilyn Chambers, Herschel Savage, John Holmes, Richard Pacheco
DVD 1 Rear Cover Description:
Marked by high production values of a bygone era, Up 'n Coming is the story of a fading country western diva, whose star is being eclipsed by her multi-talented opening ace, (Marilyn Chambers).
In the history of erotic films, no one has achieved the following Marilyn has.
DVD 2 Rear Cover Description:
The country music industry lends the backdrop to this adult classic.
Battling her own personal and professional demons, a fading superstar (Lisa De Leeuw), must now contend with being eclipsed by her new opening act, a multi-talented Up 'n Coming singer (Marilyn Chambers).
Cast List and Review posted on VEF by derjo on Aug 9, 2008
Cast
(in credits order)
Marilyn Chambers ... Cassie Harland
Lisa De Leeuw ... Althea Anderson
Herschel Savage ... Jimmy King
Richard Pacheco ... Tommy Harper
Cody Nicole ... Melanie
Loni Sanders ... Dixanne (as Loni Saunders)
John Lazar ... Paul Fallon (as John La Zar)
Clay Tanning ... T.J.
Ferris Weal ... Geno
Tina Marie ... Geno's Girlfriend (as Tiny Mary)
Steve Douglas ... Frank (as Doug Rossi)
Tom Byron ... Jessie (as Tom Byrom)
Marc Wallice ... Larry Don Wayne (as Jay B. David)
Donna Capris ... Boat Capt. #3
Brandy ... Boat Girl #2
Monique Gabrielle ... Boat Girl #1 (as Monique)
Winston Cleet ... Laundromat Man
John Holmes ... Charlie Strayhorn (as John C. Holmes)
Margaret Raines ... Anita Morales
rest of cast listed alphabetically:
Lili Marlene ... Charlie's assistant (uncredited)
Directed by
Stu Segall (as Godfrey Daniels)
Review by Hermit C-2 from Marietta, GA, USA
Made when Marilyn Chambers had some real star power in the adult film world, this was an ambitious movie with a big budget. But many a porn auteur had tried to make that great flick that will stand up to the legitimate films and failed in the attempt. This one doesn't make it either. In the end, fans will judge it as usual, on the sex action.
Marilyn plays an aspiring country singer willing to work hard to make it big. She's not averse to sleeping her way to the top, since as far as she's concerned, that's doing it on her own terms. Her scenes with Herschel Savage and with Tom Byron and another guy are personal favorites.
From the acting standpoint, the show is stolen by Lisa De Leeuw, who by this point in her career was one of porn's best thespians. She plays a boozing, over-the hill singer, and sadly, she was beginning to look the part a little. But it made for a good performance and she could sing better than Marilyn as well.
Interview with Marilyn Chambers in 1983
http://reelingback.com/articles/in_her_own_words
In her own words
It's a matter of freedom of choice
Published: Apr 22 2014, 01:01:am
In an interview during a 1983 visit to Vancouver to promote her film Up 'n' Coming, adult-film actress Marilyn Chambers spoke directly to the talking points used by anti-pornography activists.
Friday, 14 January, 1983.
LATE LAST YEAR, VANCOUVER was given a taste of politically-motivated urban terrorism. In the early hours of Monday, November 22, fire-bombers destroyed two Lower Mainland videotape shops. Unexploded incendiary devices were found in a third.
A group calling itself "the Wimmin's (sic) Fire Brigade" claimed responsibility for the arson attacks. Following the pattern established by its European kin, it communicated its demands to the government by means of a press release. " . . . shut down Red Hot Video."
Since then, much attention has been paid to the so-called "anti-pornography movement." Unfortunately, instead of reasoned debate, this attention has stimulated little more than shrill rhetoric, sloganeering and political posturing.
Thursday afternoon, actress Marilyn Chambers was in Vancouver to promote the Blaine, Washington, premiere of her most recent film, the sexually explicit Up 'n' Coming. Because so few pro-choice voices have been heard lately, I asked her to respond to some of the issues that have been raised by sincere and concerned members of the anti-porn lobby.
Do you feel that giving an explicit sexual performance degrades you? . . . exploits you? . . . makes you hateful?
No. Performing simulated sex acts in the movies degrades me. Real sex scenes are an honest statement of who I am. I am not exploited, either. No one, but no one, exploits me but me. I am a product of myself.
Hated? I'm a performer. Either (the audience) loves you or it hates you. I get very positive feelings back from my audiences. I think these woman have a lot of preconceived notions and misconceptions.
Do you know of other performers in sexually explicit films who are degraded, exploited or made hateful?
These people are all performers. They're actors. This is not a situation where people are drugged, or have guns held to their heads. That's the sort of thing that a lot of people want to believe (about the explicit sex film business) but it's not true.
Everyone I know loves their work. There are people banging down the doors to get into the business.
Please comment on the following statements: "Porn sells woman hatred."
I don't see why. Men don't hate women. They're there because they love them.
"Pornography is the rapist's trade manual."
Rape is a crime of violence, not sex. I remember a film called No Way to Treat a Lady [1968] with Rod Steiger in it. He played a nut who hated women. He'd go out and kill them, put big lipstick kisses on their faces and prop their bodies up on the toilet. Nobody complained about that.
"Violent pornography is hate propaganda against women."
What is violent pornography? These people are acting! This type of thing [sexual violence] does go on in our society. It's a fantasy to some, and hateful to others.
Look. A film is rated R if someone cuts a woman's breast off. It is rated X if someone kisses her breast. If someone kisses a breast, and then cuts it off, yeech, that's Caligula and I don't want to see it. It's still a matter of freedom of choice. Nobody's breaking people's arms to
buy videotapes.
How prevalent is sex-related violence in sexually explicit films?
It's not prevalent at all. It's a very small part of the business. It's like horror-comedy. There's really not much audience for it.
Basically X-rated movies are made to stimulate and titillate, and violence is a turn-off for most people. But, just like there's an audience for different kinds of horror films, there are some people who like to play sadomasochistic games in the bedroom.
Pornography is supposed to create a pleasurable fantasy situation. It's every woman's fantasy to be ravished. [But] no woman ever has to be beaten up or raped. You just get up and walk. Call the police, or Rape Relief.
Do you think there is a qualitative difference between violence that is explicit (simulated through special effects) in sexually explicit films and similar violence in non-sexually explicit films?
In an X-rated film the sex is real, so that makes something like a rape seem like reality, where in other films it isn't. Some people are really bothered by that.
Do so-called "snuff" films (films in which a performer is actually murdered) exist?
No, they do not exist. l've never seen one, and I don't know anyone who has. That Shackleton thing [Snuff, the 1975 film, distributed by Alan Shackleton, that generated the controversy] wasn't real. They proved that. People just want to believe in something sensational.
How prevalent is "kiddie porn" (films featuring sex with minors)?
That's a very disgusting thing. It exists, but I've never seen any, and never want to. It is not part of the business. It's underground and illegal, and it should be. That's a violent crime.
Is the audience for sexually explicit films different from the audience for non-explicit films? If so, how?
It's no different. People who go to see one, see the other.
Has the audience for sexually explicit films changed since 1972 [the year that Chambers' first X-rated feature Behind the Green Door was released]? If so, how?
The above is a restored version of a Province interview by Michael Walsh originally published in 1983. For additional information on this archived material, please visit my FAQ.
See also: In an interview during a 1980 visit to Vancouver, to promote the film Insatiable, actress Marilyn Chambers shared her memories of working with Canadian director David Cronenberg on his 1977 feature Rabid. For a comprehensive consideration of her life and career, I recommend Jared Stearns' website Private Chambers, The Marilyn Chambers Online Archive.
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