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Scandalous

Scandalous

Released Dec 27th, 2017
Running Time 100 Min.
Director Stormy Daniels
Company Wicked Pictures
DVD Extras Bonus Scenes, Still Gallery(ies), Trailer(s)
Cast Julia Ann, Marcus London, Tyler Knight, Ryan McLane, Elsa Jean, Robby Apples (aka Robby Echo), Maxim Law
Critical Rating AAA 1/2
Genres Drama, Marquee

Rating

Synopsis

When Katrina's (Julia Ann) husband died leaving a huge debt to dangerous loan shark Tito, she and her daughter (Elsa Jean) were left with the daunting responsibility of paying it back. Using their feminine charms, the mom/daughter duo were soon doing anything and everything to con their way out of trouble and repay Tito. Unfortunately an unexpected romance causes a new set of problems along the way for them and Tito's patience continues to run thin.

Reviews

A twisty story of con games and the different ways people get screwed. 

Marcus London is about to bed Elsa Jean, but he seems as interested in her shoes and feet as the rest of her. Eventually he works his way up. In the post-fuck afterglow, they are surprised by his wife Julia Ann, who pulls a gun and sends Jean on her way. Next stop, divorce court, sign here. At a bar afterwards, Julia orders a red wine as Jean walks up. "The gun was a nice touch."

"I'm full of surprises. Did you think I would pull a real gun on my own daughter?" 

Yep. Mother and daughter con artists. Even with the London score, they're still in hock to bookie Tyler Knight and they need to score another $100K in 30 days. Jean fabricates a new dating profile for Julia, who tries to find a "rich, almost dead" guy at a golf course—and scores with golf course owner Ryan McLane. Jean hooks up with Robby Echo, who’s about to open his own restaurant.

Julia finds out that McLane is married, from London, who wants to get back together with her. And Echo is ready to loan them the money they need: "My dream includes you," he tells Jean, "so I'd really like it if you didn’t get murdered." All the loose ends get tied up neatly at the end as the cons, the marks and the debtors work together for mutual benefit. 

As usual, Daniels delivers a clever screenplay, building a complete story out of small pieces with twists that stay a step ahead of the viewer. 



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