Vanessa (1977 film) explained

Vanessa
Director:Hubert Frank
Producer:Karl Spiehs
Starring:Olivia Pascal
Music:Gerhard Heinz, Mathilde Basedow
Cinematography:Franz Xaver Lederle
Editing:Mimi Werkmann, Eva Zeyn
Runtime:91 minutes
Country:West Germany (filmed in Austria, Hong Kong and Thailand)
Language:German

Vanessa is a 1977 German softcore erotic melodrama film starring Olivia Pascal and directed by Hubert Frank. Vanessa was the first movie shown on The Playboy Channel.[1]

Plot

Vanessa Anden is a misfit student at a Bavarian convent. After the death of her uncle Richard, she travels to Hong Kong to assume ownership of her uncle's estate. When she arrives, Prinz Bandor, a taxi driver later revealed to be a magician, delivers her to Richard's palatial home. There, she meets Jackie, the niece of Richard's attorney and closest friend, Anthony Grüder. Jackie's sister Cle is married to the wealthy Major Kenneth Cooper. Cle engages in a series of open extramarital affairs in an attempt to get Kenneth to divorce her.

Vanessa learns she has inherited a chain of bordellos and a large citrus plantation, but the plantation administrator, Adrian, claims to be Richard's illegitimate son and has contested the will. Adrian invites Vanessa to the plantation to persuade her to give it to him. He then attempts to rape Vanessa, but Kenneth interrupts him. Adrian's servant Tai-Neh, who is in love with Adrian, becomes furiously jealous of Adrian's interest in Vanessa. Tai-Neh uses sympathetic magic to cause Vanessa agony and leave her sick in bed. Jackie, suspecting magic, enlists Prinz Bandor's aid. Bandor perceives Tai-Neh's magic is the source of Vanessa's pain and counters it.

The court rejects Adrian's challenge and awards the entire estate to Vanessa. Adrian tries to convince Vanessa he loves her, but Vanessa fires him. Vanessa decides to keep the plantation but has Anthony sell all the brothels, thus becoming very wealthy. Kenneth invites Vanessa to her home, drugs her and sexually assaults her. Jackie, Adrian and Cle arrive as he does so, and Adrian rescues Vanessa. Kenneth asks Cle to come back to him, but she refuses. Vanessa hires Adrian to run the plantation again and returns to Europe, leaving open the possibility of a future relationship.

Cast

Production

Director Hubert Frank was a last-minute replacement for the intended director, Siggi Götz. Frank shot the film from an incomplete screenplay, which he largely ignored in favor of improvising much of the movie.[2] Producer Karl Spiehs discovered Olivia Gerlitzki, a medical assistant, and cast her in the lead role as Olivia Pascal.[3]

Reception

On Sneak Previews, Gene Siskel made Vanessa his pick for "Dog of the Week", remarking that "Vanessa is more of a travelogue than a sex show, and what sex there is is tentative, nervous, and unerotic."[4]

Reviewing the film at DVDTalk, Gerry Putzer described "Vanessa" as "[h]ardly a good movie," but "nevertheless watchable" as an artifact of 1970s cinematic erotica.[5] The German film site Filmlexikon called "Vanessa" an "elaborately-arranged and photographed sex film, contentless and speculative."[6]

Notes and References

  1. In Brief . Broadcasting Magazine . January 25, 1982 . 26 April 2021.
  2. Web site: Vanessa. DVD Talk. Gerry. Putzer. 27 August 2007. 30 September 2017.
  3. Book: Schliesser, Roman . 2006. Die Supernase: Karl Spiehs und seine Filme . Vienna . Wirtschaftsverlag Ueberreuter . 128. 978-3800072286 .
  4. Web site: Tron, The Secret of NIMH, The Devil's Playground, Gregory's Girl, 1982 . Siskel & Ebert Movie Reviews . 21 April 2023. Event occurs at 26:13-26:57.
  5. Web site: Vanessa. DVD Talk. Gerry. Putzer. 27 August 2007. 30 September 2017.
  6. Web site: Vanessa. Filmlexikon . 30 September 2017.