Genre: Erotic Drama
Director: Clement Virgo
Starring: Eric Balfour, Lauren Lee Smith,
Don Francks, Polly Shannon, Kristen Lehman
RunTime: 1 hr 29 mins
Released By: Shaw
Rating: R21 (Sexual Content)
Opening
Day: 11 May 2006
Synopsis :
Based on the novel LIE WITH ME by Tamara Faith Berger.
Leila
(Lauren Lee Smith) is a sexually voracious young woman who
connects with men through brief physical encounters. One night
at a crowded house party, Leila meets David (Eric Balfour)
and its lust at first sight. Later, as she has casual sex
with a stranger just behind the house, David and his girlfriend
mirror her actions in their car. Leila and David’s eyes
lock as they watch each other having sex with others, a courtship
ritual that initiates their own sexual affair.
Seduction is easy and very satisfying. Leila and David get
to know each other -- which means being intimate -- in bed,
at the park, on the roof, everywhere. For them, and for other
members of their generation, sex is a form of communication.
But Leila starts to realize that her attachment to David is
different from anything she’s experienced before, and
David is just as serious about her. For the first time, they
experience needs and desires that go beyond the physical.
It is an emotional connection they crave.
Afraid of the feelings they have unleashed in each other,
they retreat to the safety of their former lives. Real life,
and the messiness of emotional attachments, have punctured
their sexual and romantic bubble and threaten to keep the
lovers apart. David’s father dies after a long illness
and he turns to his ex-girlfriend for support. Leila, meanwhile,
is distracted by her parents’ looming divorce.
Leila and David are trapped between two worlds. Anonymous
sex, or sex without context, is losing its appeal. But a conventional
approach to commitment – marriage and the seemingly
inevitable divorce that follows, as evidenced by Leila’s
parents -- is not the answer. They set out to find a way to
build lust and love, spontaneity and substance, into a new
life together.
Movie
Review:
Truth
be told, once in a while you have movies like Intimacy (2001),
Swimming Pool (2003) and The Dreamers (2003), which manage
to make their way to the local screens by being touted as
artistic films. Lie With Me belongs to this genre of art house
soft-porn. There're plenty of gratuitous nudity and sex scenes
wrapped around a flimsy plot.
Based
on a novel by Tamara Berger, the title "Lie With Me"
echoes the horny, promiscuous protagonist's insatiable appetite
for being laid. We see Leila (Lauren Lee Smith) for the very
first time, pleasuring herself while engaging in one of her
favourite pastimes - watching pornographic videos in the comfort
of her sofa. She has another pastime, and that is being the
wild party girl hitting out at men in clubs, looking for her
next prey. Her aim in life? Looking for that ultimate lay.
Don't laugh. It's true.
She
chances upon David (Eric Balfour) in a nightclub and it's
lust at first sight. They watch each other make out with their
respective partners (she with a nerdy pick up, and him with
his girlfriend), in an extremely voyeuristic fashion, and
develop this mutual primal attraction for each other.
The
rest of the plot, if you really try and squeeze it out of
this film, revolves around the effort it takes to love somebody.
Contrasting commitment and sacrifice with one night stands
and flings, what exactly does it take to love someone? Do
you have it in you to give up and change the negatives inside
yourself, to be that better someone for your partner? It never
is easy, given that Leila enjoys the physical attention men
give her, while David is that hunk with an emotional
commitment issue. And it certainly doesn't help with their
reversal of the dating rituals, trying to create something
out of an empty lustful first fling - you see, they just did
it, no questions asked, no words exchanged, just physical
actions in their expression of love.
Trying
to add to the background of the leads, we see Leila struggling
with the impending breakup of her parents, so perhaps she
does what she does as a form of escapism, resulting from the
lost bonding with her folks, and engages in some form of sexual
power play on guys. On the other hand, we see two sides of
David, one the filial son, and the other, the wishy-washy
boyfriend, and it is the former role that will generally appeal.
The
artistically shot (i.e. you don't see much, and it all happens
quick enough) sex scenes and nudity in the movie will probably
attract the Yangtze crowd (almost every character has a go
at being naked, so I have a feeling this might do well if
screened there). Most of the flesh and skin shown, male and
female full frontal, isn't really necessary to further or
add depth to the plot, and for a movie like this, to have
it censored despite its R21 rating, might seem a
shame, given the range of sexual methods rolled out on
screen.
But
if you're in for some 90 minutes of pure carnal pleasure,
coupled with Leila's narration throughout the movie sounding
like dirty pillow talk amidst faux pas philosophy on love,
live and lust, then shed your inhibitions, and indulge.
Movie
Rating:
(An erotic drama with plenty of skin, but little else)
Review
by Stefan Shih
|