Erotic movies: Beautiful Girls
This humorous movie is just the thing for all people whose relationships are in emotional or sexual crisis.
One of the main characters falls for Lolita and doubts his love for his partner.
Debate about breasts and vaginas
A 1996 masterpiece
Beautiful girls, which reminds us of the movies such as Diner and The Breakfast Club, shows likeable and realistic stories of different couples and their relationship crises and through their true life experiences we can learn something good and noble. One of the characters- Gina, who is played by Rosie O’Donnell, has a particularly inspirational monologue. She explains: “Girls with
big tits have big asses, girls with little tits have little asses. That’s the way it goes. God doesn’t fuck around. He is a fair guy, he gave the fatties big, beautiful tits, and the skinnies little, tiny niddlers. It’s not my rule- you don’t like it, call him.” Then she gets a porn magazine, shows a picture of a woman to the guys and says “You like that? Yeah, it’s nice, right? Well, it doesn’t exist. Look at the hair. It’s long, it’s flowing, it’s like a river. Well it’s a fucking weave. And the tits- please! I could hang my overcoat on them. Tits by design were invented to be suckled by babies. Yes, they are purely functional. These are silicone city. And look- my favorite- the shaved pubis.
Pubic hair being so unruly and all. Very key. This is a mockery. This is a sham. This is bullshit. Implants, collagen, plastic, capped teeth, the fat sucked out, the hair extended, the nose fixed, the bush shaved- these are not real women, all right? They are beauty freaks. And they make us normal women with wrinkles, our puckered boobs and our cellulite feel somehow inadequate. No matter how perfect the nipple, how supple the thigh, unless there’s some other shit going on in a relationship besides the physical, it’s gonna get old, ok? And you guys as a gender have got to get a grip. Otherwise the future of the human race is in jeopardy.” What did our Gina really want to say? Some men still don’t know that they make models and big-breasted naked women attractive and that a good marriage material has to have a good heart. Big breasts, firm buttocks and shaved vaginas don’t mean a thing. Remember- beauty passes but the true nature of a person never goes away.
Beautiful Girls shows very real love problems of different couples.
Quickies vs. love
Willie (Timothy Hutton), who is well aware of these pearls of wisdom, is about to be married to cute Tracy (Annabeth Gish). He decides to visit his friends one last time and for a second or two he doubts his decision because he is suddenly swept off his feet by a thirteen-year-old Marty (Natalie Portman) and Andera (Uma Thurman), who he meets when he gets drunk. The scene when they suddenly find themselves alone in a small cabin is just the thing for the relationships in crisis. But Andera tells him that a quick sex with a stranger can’t be a substitute for rather unimaginative moments with her loving boyfriend. And here is Tommy (Matt Dillon) who cheats on his devoted Sharon (Mira Sorvino) with a coquettish and married Darian (Lauren Holly). But the end brings punishment and this reawakens his true love, which was overcome by short-lived lust. This movie about relationships in crisis teaches to forgive. A single act of
cheating isn’t a good enough reason to end a life-long relationship. I know talking about forgiving is easy and really doing it is a completely different ball game. The very thought of someone else’s penis inside your woman is mind-boggling but if we look at the matter from a different point of view, we should get over such a trial and value true love, trust and loyalty.
Uma Thurman plays a woman who’s convinced that a quickie can’t replace true love.
Fighting
In one of the scenes Darian’s husband and his buddies beat the hell out of Tommy. His “companion” Mo (Noah Emmerich) is determined to revenge his friends, so he drives to the husband’s house and gets him out by banging on his door. His hand becomes a fist and a fist is ready to hit, but then a little girl comes on the doorstep and asks: “Daddy, what’s going on?” And what does Mo do? Nothing. He immediately calms down and leaves. He figures out that Tommy actually deserved to be beaten because he had sex with a married woman and her husband was only saving his family. Another character we mustn’t forget to mention is Paul (Michael Rapaport) who dreams about models and can’t believe his girlfriend Jan (Martha Plimpton) left him for some butcher. Beautiful Girls tells stories about the lives of many characters, who meet in the same pub and have the usual problems. It’s a movie that reveals things as they are, even though we sometimes pretend otherwise.

































