Three unrelated stories. The first is about a dissatisfied, hurtful couple clinging together to spite each other rather than take the risk of finding a relationship. The second story consists of a series of female clients at a psychologist's office that each tell their bitter and sad stories of how they developed their attitudes towards men or sex in general. The final story is a day in the life of a model that can't seem to get past posing for the men's magazine circuit, the daily abuse she deals with, her feelings of enslavement, and the impact upon her sanity.

Director
Gerard Damiano
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"Sleepy Shores" (the Johnny Pearson musical piece at the beginning of the film) works every bit as well in this setting as it did against a more rural backdrop in Harry Thomason's phony--but oddly compelling--supernatural specumentary "Encounter with the Unknown" (narrated by Rod Serling). What it boils down to is that it sounds like the '70s, and anyone who remembers that decade (and how so much of what you saw in films and on TV looked sun-faded and fuzzy around the edges, like a Windsong perfume commercial) will recognize the sound and its magical properties. It gives me a twinge of bittersweet nostalgia every time.
@jonathanmitchell9886 2
The song is "Sleepy Shores" by Johnny Pearson. :)
@permateen 3
I saw Sue McBain in a film called "Miss Kinsley's Report." I had a crush on her, I thought she was so attractive. I wonder if she is still alive in 2020?
@nitrousninja882 2
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