Add a Review

  • Stormy Daniels gives her usual all in this Wicked Pictures vehicle for herself, but overall it fails to live up to expectations.

    She plays a successful lawyer who is a lesbian, partner to Chanel Preston for the eight years since their college days, whose life is turned upside down one day when she loses her job and mate in bam-bam fashion.

    She was expecting a promotion to partner in her firm with boss Jake Jacobs, but after announcing a big merger with Marcus London's law firm that Stormy engineered, he announces that his son will become the new partner. Stormy's eruption at the meeting gets her fired immediately, and longtime pal and co-worker Bill Bailey quits in protest.

    When she finds lover Chanel moving out, dropping Stormy to go with her secret (for months) boyfriend Tommy Pistol, Stormy is at the end of her tether. (The gambit of exchanging Stormy for Pistol is so absurd it defies even a comic relief purpose here, and the viewer is forced to suffer through creepy, out of shape Pistol humping away with Chanel, not a pleasant experience).

    Bailey comes to the star's rescue, inviting her to stay over at his family's ranch, headed by matriarch Nina Hartley (a welcome addition to the cast, made to look older by virtue of not wearing any makeup). Bailey's ne'er-do-well ex-con brother Brendon Miller (Stormy's real-life husband) shows up with a bimbo in tow (appealing gonzo starlet Amy Brooke) and even clumsily volunteers to help "turn" Stormy away from her Sapphic ways to help out bro' Bill in winning her hand.

    A very contrived happy ending conveniently ties up loose ends in the feature, making good on the double-meaning title, but none of the incidents in Daniels's script are believable.