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Give Me Your Soul...

Give Me Your Soul... (2000)

June. 16,2000
|
6.2
| Documentary

A snapshot of the porn industry in the San Fernando Valley focusing on a handful of people: Luke Ford, a reporter who breaks the industry's gentlemen's agreement and writes about actors who have HIV/AIDS; Kimberley Jade, a veteran actress who contracts AIDS; Katie June, who arrives in Los Angeles from the South, going on 20, with dreams of becoming a porn star and with her mother's approval; Jim South, who runs a talent agency; and, William Margold, an aging factotum. Others appear on camera to round out a portrait of a busy industry that's lucrative for some and dangerous for others.

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Reviews

Micitype
2000/06/16

Pretty Good

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PlatinumRead
2000/06/17

Just so...so bad

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Executscan
2000/06/18

Expected more

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Taha Avalos
2000/06/19

The best films of this genre always show a path and provide a takeaway for being a better person.

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Eyebe Peisthoff
2000/06/20

Upon the first 20 minutes of the film I got the sense it was being a little uneven in it's portrayal of the subjects at hand.After the second 20 minutes it seemed quite biased.By the end of the film it became clear this was a hatchet job of the porn business. It will show many an actor smiling only to project foreboding music chords over them in an attempt to spin the atmosphere. (spoiler) The very end of the film includes title cards explaining the current status of many of the people depicted in the doc. Their tone is clearly contemptuous in nature- betraying the antagonistic state of mind of the film's director.The porn industry certainly isn't perfect- but this film takes an unfair swipe at it.

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troym72
2000/06/21

I would really like to own this movie, however, I can't find it anywhere. Can anyone post a comment that tells me where I can find it? Thanks!I thought the movie is a compelling and a revealing look into the American pornography industry.Many girls get into this business thinking they are becoming stars and not realizing that they will be used to make money and thrown out on the street by the time they are 30.I think this movie should be shown to every girl who graduates high-school and decides to become a stripper.

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Craig Whyel
2000/06/22

It certainly was an ambitious effort though there was a heavy-handed effort at making the industry a little too sad.It would have been better served with a little more balance-not everyone who enters the business gets sucked up and spat out by it. In truth, all industries do that-when they are done with you-you are out. Some handle it better than others.I most enjoyed William Margold, and Kimberly Jade. They seemed to be the most straight-forward of the crowd of those interviewed.Of all the "names" listed as uncredited, none of those (who seemed to be successful at life in general, reasonably happy with their choice of work-despite the controversial nature of it)persons, perhaps with the exception of Randy West, and Richard Pacheco, had any sort of interview time.Like all lines of work, some have a good life with what they do while others allow themselves to get destroyed by it.Of the slew of documentaries on this subject, I've seen better.If you are curious about this industry, I suggest watching it. Not great but not bad either.I just got a little impatient with the attempts to paint the participants in a certain light.

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Damaged
2000/06/23

Laconically-narrated doc about the modern porn biz; it's none too flattering and I doubt any halfways honest movie could be. A few obvious sad stories are followed, which tend to only get more dire as they go on - particularly the story of an eager young starlet whose mother supports her decision through a look of barely-suppressed worry, which piles on one saddening climax after another until I just about felt sick. Nothing even remotely erotic is featured; the making of porn is by all accounts about as sexy as watching a dishwasher in action.Lots of interesting people are featured, very few of which could be described as likable. Of the women who are shown in any depth, one can't miss the impression that they all wish they'd stayed far away from the industry. The most powerful moments were courtesy not of a performer, but of a performer's sister, who shares some insights and disappointments.Not ham-fistedly judgmental - there's certainly enough simpleminded propaganda about the evils of the industry, rooted in the assumption that pornography is inherently evil - but not by a long shot the kind of apologism one might expect from an attemptedly serious doc about porn.

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