sábado, 21 de mayo de 2011

Books

Youth in Ecstasy


Youth is ecstasy in basically a young adult novel in which the protagonist''s father a pastor of the church by mere chance has to do for the first time that his little girl is no longer, which has become a beautiful teenager and thus in his mind, his heart beginning to surface all the fears, doubts, questions and questions that no parent wants to deal with their sons and daughters by selfishness but not for love but that does not mean that as our desire to become a reality The same nature does not forgive and continues its normal rhythm and parents depends on us that the path is easy or very difficult both for children and for parents, that children understand that parents can be friends, guides and, for that not until allies, or you will not understand for our sons and daughters we were obsolete and by them alone while his party was engaged in sexual intercourse premature, poorly focused and poorly understood by the young, unwanted pregnancies, sexually transmitted diseases and abortions. When put together all these events result in this wonderful book written with love in a simple and easy for any reader, one of the wonders of the book is that once you read the first page of books not want to stop reading to finish it completely.
Personally cry and learned many interesting things that I have served at present for the education of my daughters to dolescentes which also read the book not only that but the entire series: Juventus in ecstasy II, a cry silecioso fly on the swamp I recommend them dear readers. Parents do not know everything and not everything is written very best to reach this that all learn something from someone every day, I have learned not to lose the growth of their sons and daughters



wire dolls

Barbed Wire Dolls is exactly what I thought it would be. It’s a women in prison film that has no real plot. That may sound like a bad thing to most people, but the film is honest to itself. It exists only to be sleazy, and this is what Jess Franco excels at. Barbed Wire Dolls doesn’t try to be anything it’s not. It’s 70’s exploitation that walks the fine line of eroticism and depravity.
The story is about a group of women that are being held in a prison and are being tortured as part of their “rehabilitation” for crimes they committed. The torture scenes are not graphic, but it conveys the mental torture fairly well. The prison is being run by a lesbian warden that calls upon the prisoners to fulfill her sexual desires. Think Ilsa but with women. One random thing I found interesting about this warden is that she is seen wearing a monocle at some points. That little fact has absolutely nothing to do with the story, but come on, when’s the last time YOU saw a woman with a monocle?
Let’s get back on track here. One day the warden finds out that one prisoner tried to send out a letter stating the cruel conditions they have to suffer. The warden then tries to find out who sent the letter, and who helped the prisoner get the letter out of the prison. That’s about all there is to the story. As I said before, there really is no plot, its sleaze for sleaze sake and it’s unapologetic for it.



Barbed Wire Dolls doesn’t hold back at all. When the prison employees are torturing, or using the women in the prison to fulfill their desires, Jess Franco shoots ALL of the women. You see everything. I couldn’t find a rating for this film, but I’m sure it falls into the X category in the U.S. In certain scenes, especially during some torture scenes, Franco’s camera goes from shooting the scene to primarily focusing on the women’s naughty parts. As with many Franco movies, he finds a way to shoot scenes that leave you with mixed feelings


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