Wild Orchid II: Two Shades of Blue
Blue is a teenage girl who lives with her Jazz playing father Ham. Ham gets very sick and dies, and now Blue must support herself somehow. Elle, the headmistress at a brothel, talks her into living and working at her establishment. She decides to leave the business and lead a normal life. Elle is hellbent to see that she never has one.
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- Cast:
- Nina Siemaszko , Wendy Hughes , Tom Skerritt , Robert Davi , Brent David Fraser , Christopher McDonald , Joe Dallesandro
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Reviews
Very very predictable, including the post credit scene !!!
This story has more twists and turns than a second-rate soap opera.
It is an exhilarating, distressing, funny and profound film, with one of the more memorable film scores in years,
The story, direction, characters, and writing/dialogue is akin to taking a tranquilizer shot to the neck, but everything else was so well done.
Blue (Nina Siemaszko) and her drug-addicted jazz trumpet-playing father Ham McDonald (Tom Skerritt) go on the road. She has to sleep with Jules to get drugs for him. He crashes the car and dies. Alone, she falls under the influence of Elle (Wendy Hughes) working in her brothel. High school hunk Joshua Winslow doesn't know her secret and has fallen for her. Once he's even dragged to the brothel by his father to lose his virginity. Elle's henchman Sully (Robert Davi) rescues Blue from perverted Senator Dixon and they escape trying to live a normal life.Zalman King's overwrought style is all over this movie. It's luscious and cheesy. It's 90s late night fare. Nina Siemaszko's stone-faced acting limits this and doesn't really help the movie. It's a beautifully shot softcore porn and a slow moving melodrama.
A pretty bad movie, and despite what others seem to think, it was not as good as the first (which wasn't especially "good" either).The whole attraction for the first Wild Orchid film is the awesome sex scene with Carre Otis and Mickey Rourke. Otherwise, it's a pretty dull and even pretentious movie.However, the sequel has only one halfway decent sex scene in it, and the female character is not enjoying it at all.Overall, both Wild Orchid films are of the sort one sees on Cinemax or Showtime at 1 AM. A minute or so of eye candy isn't really worth seeing the rest of the film.
The story is about a young girl named Blue (Siemaszko) who takes a job in a brothel after her Jazz playing father (Skerritt) dies as a result of drugs. She later decides to leave and finds it difficult because of the dictator like headmistress (Hughes). The story is really weak and prevents the film from being any good. Then there is a lot of nudity and sexuality but it is not strong enough to keep the voyeurs attention either. Top it all off with poor acting and no imagination and you have "Wild Orchid II: Two Shades of Blue." So the film fails all around. The story has absolutely no similarity or connection to the original "Wild Orchid" starring Mickey Rourke which isn't much better.
Wild Orchid 2: Two Shades of Blue is a sexually explicit drama, which is essentially a teen romance. Young Blue travels with her father, Ham, while he plays jazz at nightclubs. One night Ham, desperately needing a fix, begins going through withdrawal. Blue then sleeps with a club owner for drugs, Ham uses it, and dies. Next, Blue accepts an offer from Elle, a madame, to enter a exclusive brothel, and she accepts. But fate intervenes in the guise of a high school boy Blue loves. Will she leave her life of prostitution for him?Unrated for strong sensuality and nudity, some drug content, and for language.Note: Unrated Version contains 4 more minutes of footage than the R-Rated Version.