Felicity
(Glory Annen) is a well-to-do English girl who lives in a convent and learns that she has lesbian leanings from a
young age, partly with her friend Jenny (Jody Hanson). In fact, she also discovers that her body is attractive to
both men and women and so becomes a frequent exhibitionist.
Shortly after the film begins, Felciity is off to Hong Kong to spend the summer holidays with family friend, Christine
(Marilyn Rodgers) and her husband Stephen (Gordon Charles), but just 35 minutes in she gets whisked away by her
new Asian friend, Me Ling (Joni Flynn) for an experience she'll never forget in an oriental bathhouse.
And that's just the start of her awakening in a film where everyone has slow sex to soft music in the background, except
for the time where she starts chatting to a pervy older guy called Andrew (David Bradshaw) with the most hideous
moustache ever, before he takes her for a drive in his flash car and then all but rapes her, thus forming the losing of her
virginity.
There's a scene of Felicity trying on several different sets of underwear, more Australians than I'd expect living in HK
and everyone seems to drink orange juice. The latter two happen when she spends a few days with new lover Miles
(Chris Milne) before he has to take a job in a place the name of which I quickly forgot, but at least they had a good
time together.
In this film there's a fair bit of sex between men and women, but then this was a time before AIDS became well-publicised
- and before casual pregnancy, presumably... and the acting isn't exactly of stellar standards - in fact, at times Glory Annen
sounds as stilted like Fizz from Eldorado!
Quality-wise, the picture is presented in 1.85:1 anamorphic widescreen but certainly shows the problems you'd expect of a
30-year-old soft-porn picture with its soft appearance, but while there's rarely any picture anomolies, it does occasionally
look a bit washed out.
For extras, there's a Trailer (3:38), also in anamorphic 1.85:1, an Intimate picture gallery with 19 pictures
and an audio commentary with Glory Annen and the director John Lamond, in which Glory says she was meant to be Australian,
but ended up sounding English.
The main menu contains an excerpt from the film's theme with a static background. There are no subtitles on the disc which is
a shame, but the disc contains 24 chapters which is great.
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