1 review
"Hyapatia Lee is Beautiful & Sexy" says it all with that cumbersome title amounting to truth in advertising. Smoothly handled by director hubby Bud Lee it's typical of the simple, clean-cut porn concoctions he authored over a 20-year period.
She plays a therapist who formerly was a porn star. Vignettes consist of sexual therapy sessions held in her office, giving a varied cast brief spotlights until writer Hyapatia and director Bud cede the spotlight to every-nutty Joey Silvera as her husband, and he turns the matter into comedy.
Silvera's character puts forth a familiar porno truism: he was never jealous of his wife's sexual activities when her job was porno acting, as he knew what she was up to and who she was humping every day at work. But now that she's gone straight and is Dr. Melissa Dowler he's jealous and curious about what goes on in her office behind closed doors.
Against her strenuous objections, based on professional ethics and the need for confidentiality for her dysfunctional patients, Joey manages to get permission to sit behind a one-way mirror in a back room to watch the sexual goings-on. Thanks to Joey's aggressive approach this makes for humor still amusing 30 years later, and culminates in him joining in (against Hyapatia's wishes) as a fake doctor to stage a hot threesome with frigid patient Rosemarie, a terrific Latina magazine pin-up of the era who never got her just due in cinematic assignments.
En route to that smashing finish, there are fun episodes including premature ejaculator Jerry Butler having a productive mutual masturbation session with Hyapatia; an oddball threesome spotlight buxom Ebony Ayes with her man Billy Dee and mutual friend Jon Martin, latter making it an IR content; Scott Irish as an unlikely virgin deflowered by the good doc; and a lengthy opening teaser of Blondi humped by Tony Montana under the doc's careful supervision.
Just to show they're kidding and in good spirits, the Lees indulge in a silly in-joke scene where Joey has cooked his wife a dinner as a present, and inquires how he stacks up against such folk as John Holmes, William Margold and yes, Bud Lee. To rub in the insider attitude, he carefully cleans off his cum on Hyapatia's body after sex, recalling just how they did it in the "good old days" (of porno acting).
Other than a rather glaring editing error in the final reel (messing up Joey's entrance into the office as the fake doc), Bud does a fine job of helming an entertaining trifle for his wife.
She plays a therapist who formerly was a porn star. Vignettes consist of sexual therapy sessions held in her office, giving a varied cast brief spotlights until writer Hyapatia and director Bud cede the spotlight to every-nutty Joey Silvera as her husband, and he turns the matter into comedy.
Silvera's character puts forth a familiar porno truism: he was never jealous of his wife's sexual activities when her job was porno acting, as he knew what she was up to and who she was humping every day at work. But now that she's gone straight and is Dr. Melissa Dowler he's jealous and curious about what goes on in her office behind closed doors.
Against her strenuous objections, based on professional ethics and the need for confidentiality for her dysfunctional patients, Joey manages to get permission to sit behind a one-way mirror in a back room to watch the sexual goings-on. Thanks to Joey's aggressive approach this makes for humor still amusing 30 years later, and culminates in him joining in (against Hyapatia's wishes) as a fake doctor to stage a hot threesome with frigid patient Rosemarie, a terrific Latina magazine pin-up of the era who never got her just due in cinematic assignments.
En route to that smashing finish, there are fun episodes including premature ejaculator Jerry Butler having a productive mutual masturbation session with Hyapatia; an oddball threesome spotlight buxom Ebony Ayes with her man Billy Dee and mutual friend Jon Martin, latter making it an IR content; Scott Irish as an unlikely virgin deflowered by the good doc; and a lengthy opening teaser of Blondi humped by Tony Montana under the doc's careful supervision.
Just to show they're kidding and in good spirits, the Lees indulge in a silly in-joke scene where Joey has cooked his wife a dinner as a present, and inquires how he stacks up against such folk as John Holmes, William Margold and yes, Bud Lee. To rub in the insider attitude, he carefully cleans off his cum on Hyapatia's body after sex, recalling just how they did it in the "good old days" (of porno acting).
Other than a rather glaring editing error in the final reel (messing up Joey's entrance into the office as the fake doc), Bud does a fine job of helming an entertaining trifle for his wife.