A woman working in the B movie industry begins examining the industry and the damaged, desperate people who work in it.A woman working in the B movie industry begins examining the industry and the damaged, desperate people who work in it.A woman working in the B movie industry begins examining the industry and the damaged, desperate people who work in it.
- Directors
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- Awards
- 1 win & 1 nomination total
Charles Philip Moore
- Self
- (as Chuck Moore)
Melissa Moore
- Self
- (as Melissa Ann Moore)
- Directors
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
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Featured reviews
The story about the "extremely talented" Odette Springer.
When i saw this documentary some time ago, i found it really irritating. It is in many parts Odette Springer's annoying tribute to Odette Springer with it's to many "i'm-a-extremely-fantastic-and-talented-person-but-nobody-understands-it" scenes. What makes it more annoying is that Springer looks down on the people she wants to depict (Except Maria Ford who is "a-extremely-fantastic-and-talented-person-but-nobody-understands-it".) and sometimes steps on them. It is also filled with faked documentary scenes like the ridiculous scene where Springer looks at a violent video and gets "excited" what leads us to the scene that gave me a bade taste in my mouth- in the end of the movie tries Odette Springer to find a reason to why she got "excited" when she saw the violent video and from the clear blue sky the truth falls over her (and the poor audience)- all of a sudden she remembers that she was subjected to sexual abuse by her grand parents. What makes me feel bad about that scene is that she don't presents any real evidence and that the grand parents both are dead so they don't have any chance to defend themselves from the accusation.
Insightful and Truthful
I caught this documentary by chance, and it was an eyeopener into the world of B-Movies. This genre being nothing more than filmsy scripts, mediocre acting, and of course the all important sex(nudity,and all that encompasses) and violence. Some may say that how is that different from a Hollywood movie. I would argue mainly that it is the budget that is different. But apart from that this documentary looks at how hard it is for women particularly to move from the world of showing their body to actual decent to good acting in the mainstream cinema. Anyone who sees it, will think twice when viewing these movies.
DOTH SHE PROTEST TOO MUCH?
Ms. Springer obviously has a bone to pick with the industry and she has her right to do so, of course.
However, not all B erotic movies are filled with sex coupled with violence to the extreme, as she seems to suggest. Some are well done with fairly high production values for the genre, excellent acting, and even decent plots; for example, "Secrets of a Chambermaid," "Testing the limits," "Lolita 2000," "Virtual Encounters," and many more. I believe some actresses, such as Nikki Fritz, take their roles with a professional attitude and are to be admired; there are others, such as Kira Reed, Amber Newman, Brandy Davis, Jacqueline Lovell, Samantha Phillips, and Regina Russell, who also do quite well and need not be ashamed of their work. These women, after all, have not gone into hardcore, although I'm sure many of them could have.
I notice that Stephanee LaFleur. one of the better actresses in this category who either voluntarily or under pressure has her breasts grossly augmented through surgery, provides a negative comment below though
I don't think I am way off base here, but if so, send me a response.
However, not all B erotic movies are filled with sex coupled with violence to the extreme, as she seems to suggest. Some are well done with fairly high production values for the genre, excellent acting, and even decent plots; for example, "Secrets of a Chambermaid," "Testing the limits," "Lolita 2000," "Virtual Encounters," and many more. I believe some actresses, such as Nikki Fritz, take their roles with a professional attitude and are to be admired; there are others, such as Kira Reed, Amber Newman, Brandy Davis, Jacqueline Lovell, Samantha Phillips, and Regina Russell, who also do quite well and need not be ashamed of their work. These women, after all, have not gone into hardcore, although I'm sure many of them could have.
I notice that Stephanee LaFleur. one of the better actresses in this category who either voluntarily or under pressure has her breasts grossly augmented through surgery, provides a negative comment below though
I don't think I am way off base here, but if so, send me a response.
"Rationalize" You Were Abused
'Some Nudity Required' is a documentary that on the surface appears to be a look into b-movies and exploitation flicks but that's only half true. It's really one woman's emotional trauma wrapped around the view that they're damaging to women making them. As you might sense by my tone, I didn't buy into this distorted narrative. Filmmaker Odette Springer pushes but ultimately delivers a haphazard mix. Bts footage and select interviews were fun, but the focus is in the wrong place.
Odette always dreamed of being in the movie business and now somewhat a part of it tells us the tale of her "fall into oblivion". Scoring music soundtracks for famous b-movie producer Roger Corman the violence, gratuitous sex & nudity that surrounds her work equally disturbs and fascinates her. On sets speaking to the people responsible both in front and behind the camera, she gets a picture of people earning a paycheck yet ultimately being abused. Then she reveals centuries old scars of her own.
Every time this piece hits a measure of truth, a fun quip or a legitimate talking point, there's this "woe is me" mentality right around the corner. Odette makes sure it always circles back to her on a personal level. You can feel sad & possibly understand this misguided attempt. However that doesn't excuse all the bashings b-movies get or shaming many of her interview subjects. It also conveniently leaves out the fact no one is forced to do these things. It's a voluntary choice much like how viewers can chose to watch this sort of material or not.
I hope making this was therapeutic or she got the help needed afterwards. 'Some Nudity Required' is telling the tale of a once thriving b-movie market that pushed sex, violence in cheap productions to please distributors, audiences but that's not news and the rest can't be taken seriously because it's coming from a place of hurt. Chats with Corman, notorious b-movie director Jim Wynorski (also shown acting like an ass) plus Julie Strain, Lisa Boyle & Maria Ford might be some worth to genre fans.
Odette always dreamed of being in the movie business and now somewhat a part of it tells us the tale of her "fall into oblivion". Scoring music soundtracks for famous b-movie producer Roger Corman the violence, gratuitous sex & nudity that surrounds her work equally disturbs and fascinates her. On sets speaking to the people responsible both in front and behind the camera, she gets a picture of people earning a paycheck yet ultimately being abused. Then she reveals centuries old scars of her own.
Every time this piece hits a measure of truth, a fun quip or a legitimate talking point, there's this "woe is me" mentality right around the corner. Odette makes sure it always circles back to her on a personal level. You can feel sad & possibly understand this misguided attempt. However that doesn't excuse all the bashings b-movies get or shaming many of her interview subjects. It also conveniently leaves out the fact no one is forced to do these things. It's a voluntary choice much like how viewers can chose to watch this sort of material or not.
I hope making this was therapeutic or she got the help needed afterwards. 'Some Nudity Required' is telling the tale of a once thriving b-movie market that pushed sex, violence in cheap productions to please distributors, audiences but that's not news and the rest can't be taken seriously because it's coming from a place of hurt. Chats with Corman, notorious b-movie director Jim Wynorski (also shown acting like an ass) plus Julie Strain, Lisa Boyle & Maria Ford might be some worth to genre fans.
Entertaining Documentary
Some Nudity Required (1998)
*** (out of 4)
Odette Springer was the mind behind this documentary that takes a look at "B" movies and the certain requirements that are expected out of women. Springer got her start working for Roger Corman but she soon realized that those type of "B" movies required the women to appear naked. The documentary features interviews with the likes of Julie Strain, Jim Wynorski, Roger Corman, Fred Olen Ray, Samuel Z. Arkoff, Andy and Arlene Sidaris and Brinke Stevens.
SOME NUDITY REQUIRED is a pretty strong documentary that questions some of the things that are required out of women. There's no question that the movie wants to attack the fact that women are expecting to look a certain way and the documentary wants the viewer to question why they watch these types of movies. At the same time, you've got directors like Wynorski on hand here offering up rather truthful comments including him saying that the majority of the people renting these movies aren't housewives but instead men who want to see beautiful women naked.
The documentary tackles various subjects and it remains extremely entertaining throughout. Obviously, the film puts down the fact that nudity is required yet there's plenty of nudity throughout the running time including getting some behind-the-scenes footage. If you're a fan of these types of "B" movies then this documentary really does a great job at taking you into the pre-production of these films and what decisions are made before the cameras started rolling.
*** (out of 4)
Odette Springer was the mind behind this documentary that takes a look at "B" movies and the certain requirements that are expected out of women. Springer got her start working for Roger Corman but she soon realized that those type of "B" movies required the women to appear naked. The documentary features interviews with the likes of Julie Strain, Jim Wynorski, Roger Corman, Fred Olen Ray, Samuel Z. Arkoff, Andy and Arlene Sidaris and Brinke Stevens.
SOME NUDITY REQUIRED is a pretty strong documentary that questions some of the things that are required out of women. There's no question that the movie wants to attack the fact that women are expecting to look a certain way and the documentary wants the viewer to question why they watch these types of movies. At the same time, you've got directors like Wynorski on hand here offering up rather truthful comments including him saying that the majority of the people renting these movies aren't housewives but instead men who want to see beautiful women naked.
The documentary tackles various subjects and it remains extremely entertaining throughout. Obviously, the film puts down the fact that nudity is required yet there's plenty of nudity throughout the running time including getting some behind-the-scenes footage. If you're a fan of these types of "B" movies then this documentary really does a great job at taking you into the pre-production of these films and what decisions are made before the cameras started rolling.
Did you know
- TriviaIn interviews, Odette Springer said that while working on the documentary, she realized the true nature of the business' alarming fascination. It was not until she was well into production that she realized her excursion into this "over-the-top world that Fellini couldn't have made up" was taking a personal toll. Compiling the clips, she found herself inexplicably obsessed with and aroused by the very images she considered violent and degrading. "First, I was irate at some of this stuff," she said. "I watched these movies and I hated them. But my body was telling me something different. I didn't realize I had such a shadow side to my own sexuality. I found myself getting turned on, and it horrified me." The clips also awakened long-suppressed memories of being sexually molested as a child, the pleasure of being touched coupled with the fear of being controlled by adults. This connection is made clear in the movie by home movie footage of her as a young girl cavorting about naked. The irony was not lost on Springer that movies she considered damaging helped her to grow and "become stronger." "That's a very confusing thing," she said. "This is the last place I would have looked for healing, believe me."
- ConnectionsFeatures The She-Creature (1956)
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Details
- Release date
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- Hollywood avklätt
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- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
- Gross US & Canada
- $5,853
- Opening weekend US & Canada
- $3,082
- Oct 18, 1998
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