Thoughts and questions


I really enjoyed this film despite its bad acting, overdubbed dialogue, and cringeworthy script. I think, in large part, due to just being able to gaze upon Gigi Darlene's gorgeous face and perfect body for the better part of an hour. (On that subject, another thread on here snarkily implies that she's 20 pounds overweight. I guess this is the type of person we have to thank for the Hollywood media machine spitting out one rail-thin, cookie-cutter actress/model after another. There's just no accounting for taste.)

Let me stress again how amazingly beautiful Gigi Darlene is in both face and body. OK, I think I made my point. On to the questions...

Perhaps I shouldn't expect to make sense of these things given the fact that the primary purpose of films like this was simply to be the delivery mechanism for lewd and lascivious imagery for men to ogle at, with the script/acting/everything else being very distant seconds. That being said, I will still engage in such nonsense.

1) Is the character of Meg supposed to be one of the "bad girls" referred to in the title? If so, what made her bad? The fact that she stepped out of her apartment wearing such intimate clothing? The fact that she accidentally killed someone in self-defense? The fact that she ran away out of fear and didn't own up to the crime?

2) The rapist tells her she better not tell anyone about what happened, which makes sense. He then, minutes later, tells her to come to his apartment or else he'll tell her husband what happened. Aside from the incongruity of telling her not to tell anyone, then immediately threatening her that he's going to tell someone, what kind of a threat is this? What's he going to tell her husband? That he tried to rape his wife? How is that any kind of threat to her? If anything, that would be a threat against him.

3) When the female roommate tells her she loves her, Meg replies, "I love you too. That is why I must leave." Huh???

I guess the fact that all of this ends up being a dream could be a way of saying none of it had to make any sense, but I don't think that's what the filmmakers were thinking when writing this script.

reply