If you can wrap your mind
around the concept of a movie in which three women strive to bring integrity to
the massage business despite interference from mobsters, then, congratulations,
you’re the target audience for The
Manhandlers. While not nearly as sleazy as its premise might suggest, this
lighthearted drama has an unavoidably leering quality, since the comely
protagonists stroke men’s bodies for a living. The notion that they draw the
line as to which areas they’re willing to stroke is what kicks the threadbare
plot into gear. Katie (Cara Burgess) inherits a massage parlor after gangsters
kill her uncle, the previous owner. Katie is shocked to discover that the
ladies working at the parlor use massage sessions as come-ons for—well, let’s
just stick with retail terminology and call it “upselling.” After dismissing
the working girls, Katie recruits two friends, an actress
bored with doing commercials for products including “Madonna Vaginal Spray” and
a secretary tired of dodging her handsy boss, then re-opens the massage parlor
without the prostitution component. This aggravates local gangsters, who demand
a slice of her profits, but Katie somehow becomes romantically involved with a
young mobster and—oh, never mind. The
Manhandlers is relatively inoffensive, insomuch as it could have been
cruder, but the movie is painfully dull and predictable; although some of the
performances are acceptable, nothing much happens. The producers deserve some
measure of respect for resisting the temptation to stock The Manhandlers with gratuitous nudity and salacious happy-ending
scenes, but they didn’t replace the missing sensationalism with anything of commensurate
interest. And if there’s a quasi-feminist statement here, something about women
taking control of their destinies, it’s obscured by the titillating nature of
the premise.
The Manhandlers: LAME
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ReplyDeleteAnyone know where the exact location of the massage parlor was in the movie?
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