Adicionar um enredo no seu idiomaDocumentary on the "Chicken Ranch," a legal Nevada brothel.Documentary on the "Chicken Ranch," a legal Nevada brothel.Documentary on the "Chicken Ranch," a legal Nevada brothel.
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I loved the ending, which I will not reveal here.
Well done documentary of letting the subjects tell/live their own story and interact with each other to expand the viewer's awareness of whom they are and what their work is about. Underlying power and control dynamics burst into full view at the end! Although it focuses on the work of "working girls" in a Nevada brothel, it is also reflects human interactions when people are confined in the same space for weeks or months at a time. The opening and occasional shots of the desolate desert just reinforce the dependency of the "confinees" on each other for their emotional needs.
If you prefer a lot of action, this will feel slow to you, but it is just letting the subjects lives unfold at the pace they experience it. Biggest fault is the poor video quality in an age of HD!
Well done documentary of letting the subjects tell/live their own story and interact with each other to expand the viewer's awareness of whom they are and what their work is about. Underlying power and control dynamics burst into full view at the end! Although it focuses on the work of "working girls" in a Nevada brothel, it is also reflects human interactions when people are confined in the same space for weeks or months at a time. The opening and occasional shots of the desolate desert just reinforce the dependency of the "confinees" on each other for their emotional needs.
If you prefer a lot of action, this will feel slow to you, but it is just letting the subjects lives unfold at the pace they experience it. Biggest fault is the poor video quality in an age of HD!
A kind of slow moving documentary of a Nevada brothel. The brothel, The Chicken Ranch, is also the inspiration for the moviw "The Best Little Whore House in Texas". It shows the lives of ~15 girls, the madame and the owner. There is so much more possibility of a documentary of a whore house, and the subject matter could have been dealt with in a more interesting matter. One saving point is the prostitutes dealing with cheap, dumb, rednecks.
I am a script writer and I am currently writing a theme on prostitution and its characterization. I was so glad I saw this documentary on SBS the other night because it was exactly what I was hoping for. The dialogues are very realistic and after watching this you do get a somewhat good indication of the lives of a 'common' prostitute. It really does depict the contradictions of life and its limitations. So if you do enjoy the study of human interactions and characterizations, this is the film for you. I rate it 8/10
My review was written in 1983 after a Greenwich Village screening.
Filmed last year at a Nevada brothel, "Chicken Ranch" is a tedious, ill-conceived cinema verite exercise made to fill time on British tv, and, as is increasingly the case with UK tube product of late, acquired for theatrical distribution in the U. S. This schlock-doc consists mainly of talking-heads footage of inarticulate prostitutes and is aimed at curiosity seekers interested in taking a peek inside a legalized whorehouse and snickering at the lowlife people on display.
Novelty value of directors Nick Broomfield (who did a nice job last time out with Joan Churchill on doc "Soldier Girls") and Sandi Sissel's project is nil, since the exact same territory was assayed in the mid-1970s in Robert Guralnick's "Mustang: The House that Jack Built", filmed at a more famous Nevada brothel which is briefly alluded to by one of the prosties here. Major difference between the two docs is that Guralnick included nudity, while Broomfield and Sissel's chaste approach makes the goings-on behind closed doors as cryptic as can be.
Slackly edited, "Ranch" makes the pretense of an "invisible camera", observing the prostitutes coming out for the repetitive ritual of selection by geek-esque customers, their chatty personal anecdotes, views of a tough-as-nails manageress barking orders, and comical footage of the pompous owner, whose sentimental Thanksgiving Dinner speech sounds as if it were written by Prof. Irwin Corey.
Since the directors make the basic mistake of assuming the camera's presence will not affect the subject being observed, it is not surprising that much of the doc seems like an inept home movie, with the women engaging in childish horseplay on their off-hours, and pouring out bitter, man-hating banalities during group discussion sessions. Even the "johns" (customers) come off as false, obviously aware they are being photographed except for a group of Japanese tourists who are here callously treated as figures of fun.
Self-congratulatory finale to this ephemeral opus has the owner ordering the filmmakers to surrender their film and stop shooting when he catches them lensing footage of one of the prostitutes angrily packing to leave after she has quit/been fired due to a disagreement with the boss ove payment for services. He threatens to sue, the film ends, but Broomfield and Sissel have their film for exhibition including the disputed sequence. Big deal.
Filmed last year at a Nevada brothel, "Chicken Ranch" is a tedious, ill-conceived cinema verite exercise made to fill time on British tv, and, as is increasingly the case with UK tube product of late, acquired for theatrical distribution in the U. S. This schlock-doc consists mainly of talking-heads footage of inarticulate prostitutes and is aimed at curiosity seekers interested in taking a peek inside a legalized whorehouse and snickering at the lowlife people on display.
Novelty value of directors Nick Broomfield (who did a nice job last time out with Joan Churchill on doc "Soldier Girls") and Sandi Sissel's project is nil, since the exact same territory was assayed in the mid-1970s in Robert Guralnick's "Mustang: The House that Jack Built", filmed at a more famous Nevada brothel which is briefly alluded to by one of the prosties here. Major difference between the two docs is that Guralnick included nudity, while Broomfield and Sissel's chaste approach makes the goings-on behind closed doors as cryptic as can be.
Slackly edited, "Ranch" makes the pretense of an "invisible camera", observing the prostitutes coming out for the repetitive ritual of selection by geek-esque customers, their chatty personal anecdotes, views of a tough-as-nails manageress barking orders, and comical footage of the pompous owner, whose sentimental Thanksgiving Dinner speech sounds as if it were written by Prof. Irwin Corey.
Since the directors make the basic mistake of assuming the camera's presence will not affect the subject being observed, it is not surprising that much of the doc seems like an inept home movie, with the women engaging in childish horseplay on their off-hours, and pouring out bitter, man-hating banalities during group discussion sessions. Even the "johns" (customers) come off as false, obviously aware they are being photographed except for a group of Japanese tourists who are here callously treated as figures of fun.
Self-congratulatory finale to this ephemeral opus has the owner ordering the filmmakers to surrender their film and stop shooting when he catches them lensing footage of one of the prostitutes angrily packing to leave after she has quit/been fired due to a disagreement with the boss ove payment for services. He threatens to sue, the film ends, but Broomfield and Sissel have their film for exhibition including the disputed sequence. Big deal.
Chicken Ranch (1983)
*** (out of 4)
Directors Nick Broomfield and Sandi Sissel take us to a brothel in Nevada where we meet the owner, the manager, the ladies as well as several clients who visit the location for some fun.
CHICKEN RANCH isn't a masterpiece by any stretch of the imagination but there's no question that it's highly entertaining and fun to watch. The film has a lot of interesting things going for it but it's basically just a collection of stories that the women tell about various clients. Some of the highlights include the actual interactions between the women and the clients. The women line up, they're selected and then there's the negotiation.
Some of the highlights include a group of Japanese men who come into the brothel but don't know English. Another highlight is a drunk who wants to party for as little money as possible. Another interesting moment happens when one of the women quits and we see a different type of "owner" than what we saw earlier in the picture.
It would be great to see some sort of follow-up on this movie just to see what happened to the women.
*** (out of 4)
Directors Nick Broomfield and Sandi Sissel take us to a brothel in Nevada where we meet the owner, the manager, the ladies as well as several clients who visit the location for some fun.
CHICKEN RANCH isn't a masterpiece by any stretch of the imagination but there's no question that it's highly entertaining and fun to watch. The film has a lot of interesting things going for it but it's basically just a collection of stories that the women tell about various clients. Some of the highlights include the actual interactions between the women and the clients. The women line up, they're selected and then there's the negotiation.
Some of the highlights include a group of Japanese men who come into the brothel but don't know English. Another highlight is a drunk who wants to party for as little money as possible. Another interesting moment happens when one of the women quits and we see a different type of "owner" than what we saw earlier in the picture.
It would be great to see some sort of follow-up on this movie just to see what happened to the women.
Você sabia?
- CuriosidadesAlthough this is before Nick Broomfield started appearing in his own films, part of his body enters the frame in a couple of shots (he's holding the sound equipment) and his voice can be heard asking a couple of questions near the end.
- ConexõesReferenced in Mamãe é de Morte (1994)
- Trilhas sonorasA Lil' Ole Bitty Pissant Country Place
(uncredited)
Performed by Carlin Glynn, Lisa Brown, Carol Chambers, Donna King, Marta Sanders, Jan Merchant, Louise Quick, Debra Zalkind, Becky Gelky
Written by Carol Hall
Played during opening and closing scenes
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