Released | Sep 30th, 1993 |
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Running Time | 79 |
Director | Anthony Spinelli |
Company | Plum Productions |
Critical Rating | AAA 1/2 |
Genre | Feature |
Joey Silvera and Rocco work very well together due, in large part, to the fact their respective screen personae are fundamentally poles apart. Urbane Rocco's gig is that he has this little boy-lost quality that women fall all over themselves to help find, whereas Wildman Joey's lost it and nobody's got a clue where to look.
The roles reverse in Frat Girls of Double D, which has about as much to do with college as the S.A.T. has to do with the past tense of sitting. In an Abbott & Costello-ish send up, Joey and Rocco are patients of a power drill-wielding dentist. The scene is brought home hilariously in the smooth Spinelli economy of mood lighting, suggestion and exaggeration. Rocco, who contributes a handsome, awards-worthy acting performance as a suspected crackpot with delusions of grandeur (give Joey kudos as his second banana), is grateful to Joey for emotional support. So grateful that he INSISTS on becoming Joey's friend. He INSISTS. "Got a pen?" asks Joey, giving him his phone number. "I got a bad pen," moans Rocco, holding his jaw through a gauze-shrouded Italian accent. You get an idea of where this is going.
Joey grows weary of Rocco, as Rocco proves his persistently annoying gratitude by bringing over one big-breasted girl after another to Joey – as when he and Joey tag-team Wendy Whoppers five ways to Sunday in a twin splash cum bath on her tits. After first licking her ass, Joey then pops Jessica Fox, while Rocco manhandles Tami Monroe, making her a human wheelbarrow in the doggie position. Debi Diamond's on the receiving end for a change as Melanie Moore spits into her pussy and attacks her in the feature's girl/girl scene, while Rebecca Bardoux and Mark Davis doggie up in a non-related scene filler.
Mitchell Spinelli's script is clever with a marvelous, quirky interpretation supplied by Rocco and Silvera. The show's for all intents and purposes a Rocco-Joey machofest, since the female players get no dialogue or character to speak of. The story thins out a bit, though, as the last two sex scenes kind of get snuck in there like a late tax return. Overall, Frat Girls of Double D is very likeable couple's entertainment, and if Rocco is one of your favorites, this is a show definitely to stock since it's as out-of-character for him as it gets.