Talk Dirty to Me Part III
Talk Dirty To Me Part III | |
---|---|
Directed by | Ned Morehead |
Written by | Jerry Ross |
Produced by | Jerry Ross |
Starring | John Leslie Jamie Gillis Ginger Lynn Susan Hart Tom Byron Bunny Bleu Marc Wallice Rikki Blake Peter North Colleen Brennan (as Sharon Kelly) Amber Lynn Traci Lords (original version) Lisa De Leeuw (reedited version) |
Edited by | Roden Gorbach |
Music by | Jack Spinoza |
Distributed by | Dreamland Home Video |
Release date |
|
Running time | 90 minutes |
Language | English |
Talk Dirty to Me Part III is a 1984 pornographic film and a spoof on the mainstream film Splash[1] and is the second sequel to the original 1980 film Talk Dirty to Me. John Leslie had the lead role, playing "Jack", a character he had played in the first two installments of the Talk Dirty to Me series. Other cast members include Amber Lynn, Peter North, Jamie Gillis and Ginger Lynn. It won Best Film at the 1985 AVN Awards.[2]
Leslie would continue to play Jack in two more installments of the series, after which the films became less relevant to the original film. At least a dozen Talk Dirty to Me films would ultimately be produced into the early 2000s.[citation needed]
Controversy
[edit]The original film is controversial for having Traci Lords in the cast (she was in fact featured in the original poster for the film and plays a key role). Following the May 1986 revelations that she was underage under U.S. law during filming, the movie was re-edited with Lisa De Leeuw replacing her in re-shot scenes. However, the re-shot footage was done on NTSC videotape, which did not match well with the remaining original 35mm film footage.
Scene breakdown
[edit]Scene 1 | Rikki Blake, John Leslie |
---|---|
Scene 2 | Traci Lords (Lisa De Leeuw in reedited version) |
Scene 3 | Ginger Lynn, Tom Byron |
Scene 4 | Amber Lynn, John Leslie |
Scene 5 | Bunny Bleu, Susan Hart, Jamie Gillis |
Scene 6 | Traci Lords (Lisa De Leeuw in reedited version), John Leslie |
References
[edit]- ^ "Talk Dirty To Me 3". RogReviews. 14 August 1997. Retrieved 11 September 2020.
- ^ "AVN Awards Show". Retrieved 1 April 2016.
External links
[edit]