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Female Perversions

  • 1996
  • 12
  • 2h
IMDb RATING
5.4/10
3K
YOUR RATING
Female Perversions (1996)
DramaFantasyThriller

An ambitious female attorney wallows in excess and meaningless sex with both male and female partners, while dealing with her personal life problems including helping her kleptomaniac sister... Read allAn ambitious female attorney wallows in excess and meaningless sex with both male and female partners, while dealing with her personal life problems including helping her kleptomaniac sister.An ambitious female attorney wallows in excess and meaningless sex with both male and female partners, while dealing with her personal life problems including helping her kleptomaniac sister.

  • Director
    • Susan Streitfeld
  • Writers
    • Louise J. Kaplan
    • Julie Hébert
    • Susan Streitfeld
  • Stars
    • Tilda Swinton
    • Amy Madigan
    • Clancy Brown
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.4/10
    3K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Susan Streitfeld
    • Writers
      • Louise J. Kaplan
      • Julie Hébert
      • Susan Streitfeld
    • Stars
      • Tilda Swinton
      • Amy Madigan
      • Clancy Brown
    • 37User reviews
    • 23Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 2 nominations total

    Videos1

    Official Trailer
    Trailer 1:48
    Official Trailer

    Photos25

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    Top cast39

    Edit
    Tilda Swinton
    Tilda Swinton
    • Eve Stephens
    Amy Madigan
    Amy Madigan
    • Maddie Stephens
    Clancy Brown
    Clancy Brown
    • John
    John Diehl
    John Diehl
    • Jake Rock
    Shawnee Smith
    Shawnee Smith
    • Make-Up Salesgirl
    Nina Wise
    • Lingerie Saleswoman
    Judy Jean Berns
    • Boutique Saleswoman
    Lisa Jane Persky
    Lisa Jane Persky
    • Margot
    J. Patrick McCormack
    • Wallace
    Karen Sillas
    Karen Sillas
    • Renee
    Abdul Salaam El Razzac
    Abdul Salaam El Razzac
    • Homeless Man
    • (as Abdul Salaam el Razzac)
    Paulina Porizkova
    Paulina Porizkova
    • Langley Flynn
    Laila Robins
    Laila Robins
    • Emma
    Dale Shuger
    • Edwina
    Sandy Martin
    Sandy Martin
    • Trudy
    Elizabeth Cava
    • Female Jail Guard
    Marcia Cross
    Marcia Cross
    • Beth Stephens
    Frances Fisher
    Frances Fisher
    • Annunciata
    • Director
      • Susan Streitfeld
    • Writers
      • Louise J. Kaplan
      • Julie Hébert
      • Susan Streitfeld
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews37

    5.42.9K
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    10

    Featured reviews

    7Phoenix-36

    A brilliant look at women struggling with their identities

    This is a terrific film about women struggling to discover a way to find and develop their identity. While some of the allusions and metaphors can be a bit heavy handed, they are effective.

    Eve (Tilda Swinton) is a lawyer about to be nominated for a judgeship. While her professional life is as much as she could wish, her personal life is a mess. She is involved with an architect (male) and a psychotherapist, Renee. But she is unable to connect with either. Her upbringing, devotion to her work, and desperate desire for control have left her emotionally stunted, unable to make a real connection to anyone around her.

    One day, her sister is picked up for shoplifting. Eve rides to her rescue, and spends several days in the middle of nowhere, with an exotic dancer, a young girl just entering puberty, and a brilliant but shattered friend.

    Many critics hated this movie (most guides give it just 2 or 3 stars) but I think they couldn't get past Eve's coldness. But this movie is a study in coldness, in emotional death and rebirth. But it is not Eve who is reborn. See it and judge for yourself.
    youroldpaljim

    Another film with unpleasant people we are supposed to like.

    While viewing FEMALE PERVERSIONS, I began to wonder if I was losing my mind. For whom was this film made? Who put up the money to make this film? FEMALE PERVERSIONS is pretentious piece of clap trap masquerading as something deep and meaningful. Woman have it rough competing in male dominated society and men are responsible for all of woman neurosis seems to be the message. Ho Hum! Where have we heard that before?

    Just about every character in this film is angry, nasty, neurotic, and unpleasant, except for teenage "Tomgirl" named Ed, who is just a little mixed up. The scenes of Eve's dreams and hidden memories are down right laughable, like the kind of stuff found in some over indulgent student film. The film has not coherent plot, just a lot of incidents. And would somebody please explain the ending?

    There are some people who praise this film because it deals with characters searching for their identity, but most of the characters come across as so self absorbed that they evoke no sympathy. The film puts an emphasis on getting in touch with ones "feelings." But when one constantly dwells on his/her feelings, its leads to selfishness and hedonism, a point the films makers seem not to be aware of.
    Red_Identity

    Wild

    It seems to me that quite a lot of people really dislike this film, when in reality, it's not very warranted. Oh sure, it's very weird, sexual, very "artsy" in the way you know will annoy a quite large number of people. I found it fascinating, though. I found it unpredictable and fun (until the pretty heavy final 15 minutes) and most importantly, I was able to see the glorious, best- actress-alive Tilda Swinton in a very different sort of role, a sort of role that I had never seen her do before but which she nails. She's very seductive and cold here, very unlikable and Swinton manages to make it all work gloriously, along with an impressive Amy Madigan as the most important secondary character.
    6claudio_carvalho

    A Weird Movie With Bizarre Characters

    The compulsive, neurotic, deranged and bi-sexual efficient and tough lawyer Evelyn Stephens (Tilda Swinton) is depending on an interview with the Governor to be appointed as a judge in the court of law. Her kleptomaniac sister Maddie Stephens (Amy Madigan) is finishing her PhD in UCLA. While waiting for her interview, Eve has a simultaneous affair with John (Clancy Brown) and the psychologist Renee (Karen Sillas), and helps her mean sister to leave the jail, arrested in a shoplifting.

    "Female Perversions" is a weird movie with bizarre characters. The sad soundtrack and the photography are very beautiful and the interpretations of the cast are excellent. However, although being intriguing and provocative in some moments, the story never reaches a point and sometimes becomes boring. Further, although having naked women and many sex scenes, they are not erotic and does not excite, at least under the view of a man. I did not like this movie, but I recognize that it is a stylistic film with great performances. My vote is six.

    Title (Brazil): "Desejos Femininos" ("Female Desires")
    robert-temple-1

    Not a pornographic film despite the title

    The title of this film is dangerously misleading because the film might be thought to be pornographic, and many people who might otherwise find it interesting will not see it. (The contrary is also the case, that all the wrong people will want to watch it because they are titillated by the title. They will also react with violent antipathy, in the wake of their disappointment. The choice of title seems to have been a deliberate act of provocation.) The German title, translated, is 'Fantasies of a Woman', which is rather milder. The film is a feminist essay, and the title is intended to be ironical, the 'female perversions' referred to being those imposed upon women by a conventional male-dominated society, so that for instance being a housewife is regarded as one type of 'female perversion'. It seems somehow natural that the wildly experimental Tilda Swinton would have to be in this film: indeed, how could she say no? How could such a film be made without her? She seems to be everywhere that people and films are pushing the envelope. As usual, she is breathtakingly brilliant. A surprising addition to the cast is Frances Fisher, who made such an impact as Angie, the red-headed waitress in the diner, in the intriguing television series 'Strange Luck' in 1995-6, at about this same time. Here she does some rather unnerving 'exotic dance' routines, which all goes to show something, I'm still trying to decide what, but whatever the reason for this is, she does it very well and one would think she had been a stripper or a showgirl all her life if one did not know she had instead been an actress. Tilda Swinton is electric here as a career gal who is so tense she might snap like a wire stretched too taut. She is about to be made a judge, God help us! (Many judges are crazy or weird anyway, but she would be more so than most, as the film makes all too clear.) Tilda Swinton portrays an extreme neurotic, and 'looking good' is essential to her, so she is always doing and re-doing her lipstick (an insecure woman's last refuge). She is a control freak and insanely superstitious. For instance, if she cannot wear her white suit for an interview with the Governor of California (not Arnie, a fictional one) for a judgeship, because it is 'lucky', she falls apart. Her kleptomaniac sister sees to it that she cannot wear the suit to the interview. Things are pretty tense like this throughout, and there are many fantasy elements to this film written, produced, and directed by women with women for women. I don't believe this film can really be excused by a 'women searching for their identities' justification, and if one approaches it earnestly from that angle (which may have been the earnest intention of the makers, for all I know), it is a failure which verges on parody sometimes, and has pretentious aspects. The merits of the film are different, and concern the intensity of portrayal and the mysterious depths of character revealed, especially of hidden or suppressed motivations. The lesbian aspects of the film are not central, but merely a part of the evolving self-realization of Tilda Swinton's character. I am firmly convinced that men can never understand women and women can never understand men. I first came to realize this in my teens when the novelist Pearl Buck said to me that 'men and women are completely different species and can never hope to understand one another'. That shocked me a lot, I never forgot it, and it has been repeatedly verified. I have now come to the conclusion that Nature has designed things this way. The imperative of Nature is the propagation of the species. If men and women understood each other, that would get in the way of propagation, and many fewer babies would be born. Consequently, evolutionary pressures have seen to it that this can never happen, in order to safeguard the future of the species. That is why men like myself who do not regard women as inferior beings (as many of my gender definitely do) are so intrigued by 'the mystery of women' and interested to see attempts to make films like this one where women contemplate women and try to understand themselves. It is true that there are no admirable characters on offer here, and that they are all pretty horrible people. Nevertheless, this film manages to be fascinating, although it is understandable that it would cause a lot of contradictory reactions, some of them violently opposed to it, and some admiring and appreciative. If we want films to punch us in the ribs instead of putting us to sleep, this one certainly qualifies. This is what is called 'independent film making', and long may it continue.

    Related interests

    Mahershala Ali and Alex R. Hibbert in Moonlight (2016)
    Drama
    Elijah Wood in Le Seigneur des anneaux : La Communauté de l'anneau (2001)
    Fantasy
    Cho Yeo-jeong in Parasite (2019)
    Thriller

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      The first American role and the first American movie for Tilda Swinton.
    • Goofs
      The boom mic visible in different parts of the movie. In one scene where Maddie is thinking about the past looking at the photograph, and in a second scene at the bathroom where Eve and Maddie take a bath together.
    • Quotes

      Eve Stephens: I need you desperately.

      Renee: [chuckles] Let's see... uh, we met in an elevator, right? We had two drinks, went back to my place and had great sex. You had five orgasms, I only had three. And now you are so desperate to see me?

      Eve Stephens: [sits down] Very desperate... doctor.

      Renee: Well uh... I'm sorry what was your last name?

      Eve Stephens: Stephens.

      Renee: Miss Stevens, right. In my professional opinion, you are a deeply compulsive, highly neurotic, extremely co-dependent woman who more then likely loves too much... or too little. I can't remember which.

      Eve Stephens: [sarcastic] Finally someone understands me!

    • Connections
      Featured in The Movie Show: Episode dated 12 March 1997 (1997)
    • Soundtracks
      Fire in the Mist (Annunciata's Dance)
      Written and Performed by Johnny Reno

      Published by Reno Beat Music/Justice Artists Music Corp. (BMI)

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    FAQ18

    • How long is Female Perversions?Powered by Alexa

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • November 21, 1996 (Germany)
    • Countries of origin
      • Germany
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Kadın sapkınlıkları
    • Filming locations
      • Bakersfield, California, USA
    • Production companies
      • Mindy Affrime
      • ARD Degeto Film
      • Starhaus Filmproduktion
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $926,954
    • Gross worldwide
      • $926,954
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 2h(120 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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