The story takes place against the chaotic and decisive backdrop of the D-Day invasion in World War II. A group of American soldiers, led by General Haskel (Kelsey Grammer), receives a highly secret and dangerous mission: they must infiltrate behind enemy lines in France to smuggle in a member of the French Resistance. The ultimate goal is purely strategic and lethal: to assassinate a high-value Nazi target. The main cast of soldiers includes familiar names such as William Moseley (the eternal Peter from The Chronicles of Narnia) and Pooch Hall.
Classic and Direct Premise: The "suicide mission behind enemy lines" dynamic is a formula that always generates some initial tension. The film doesn't waste much time with lengthy introductions and gets straight to the point.
Strived Performances: Despite the limited script, the cast does what it can. It's interesting to see William Moseley in a much more mature and raw role than in his teen fantasy films, and Gilles Marini delivers a worthy representation of the resistance.
Short Duration: At only 1 hour and 26 minutes long, the film doesn't drag on unnecessarily, preventing it from becoming completely drawn out.
Visibly Low Budget: Although the setting attempts to emulate the destruction of World War II, the production suffers from a lack of funding. The sets seem repetitive, the visual effects of explosions and gunfire lack realism, and the battles give the impression of a smaller-scale combat than the historical moment demanded.
Lack of Depth: The characters are walking stereotypes of the war genre: the tough soldier, the frightened rookie, the reluctant leader. You don't spend enough time with them to care when someone is in danger.
Expensive Candy goes beyond what's expected of a commercial erotic film. Although it uses sensuality as a draw, the film delivers an interesting character study about expectations, unrequited love, and the socioeconomic barriers in modern romance. It's not a conventional fairytale love story, and that's precisely why it works.
Classic and Direct Premise: The "suicide mission behind enemy lines" dynamic is a formula that always generates some initial tension. The film doesn't waste much time with lengthy introductions and gets straight to the point.
Strived Performances: Despite the limited script, the cast does what it can. It's interesting to see William Moseley in a much more mature and raw role than in his teen fantasy films, and Gilles Marini delivers a worthy representation of the resistance.
Short Duration: At only 1 hour and 26 minutes long, the film doesn't drag on unnecessarily, preventing it from becoming completely drawn out.
Visibly Low Budget: Although the setting attempts to emulate the destruction of World War II, the production suffers from a lack of funding. The sets seem repetitive, the visual effects of explosions and gunfire lack realism, and the battles give the impression of a smaller-scale combat than the historical moment demanded.
Lack of Depth: The characters are walking stereotypes of the war genre: the tough soldier, the frightened rookie, the reluctant leader. You don't spend enough time with them to care when someone is in danger.
Expensive Candy goes beyond what's expected of a commercial erotic film. Although it uses sensuality as a draw, the film delivers an interesting character study about expectations, unrequited love, and the socioeconomic barriers in modern romance. It's not a conventional fairytale love story, and that's precisely why it works.
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