Body Chemistry IV: Full Exposure

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Body Chemistry IV: Full Exposure
Directed byJim Wynorski
Screenplay byKaren Kelly
Produced byAndrew Stevens
Starring
CinematographyZoran Hochstätter
Edited byVanick Moradian
Music byPaul Di Franco
Production
company
Sunset Films International
Distributed byNew Horizons Home Video
Release date
September 19, 1995
Running time
80 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish

Body Chemistry IV: Full Exposure is a 1995 erotic thriller sequel directed by Jim Wynorski and written by Karen Kelly. It is the third film in the Body Chemistry franchise and the only one not to be written by Jackson Barr.[citation needed]

Plot[edit]

Dr. Claire Archer (Shannon Tweed) is arrested for the double murder of producer Alan Clay (Andrew Stevens) and Freddie Summers (Chick Vennera) and hires attorney Simon Mitchell (Larry Poindexter) to defend her at trial. Simon is highly successful at his job but becomes completely blindsided by Dr. Archer. Powerless to resist her charms, he's rapidly drawn into an ever tightening web of obsession, lust and betrayal. When his marriage begins to fall apart under the weight of his affair with his client, Simon is forced to choose between his wife and a sexual predator that will never let him go.

Cast[edit]

Production[edit]

Sunset Films International was founded by Andrew Stevens and Jim Wynorski in 1994 and Body Chemistry IV: Full Exposure was announced as part of its inaugural slate of films alongside Skins with Linda Blair and Wings Hauser, Sorceress with Edward Albert and Julie Strain and Hard Bounty starring Matt McCoy, Kelly LeBrock and John Terlesky.[1] In addition Dr. Archer being recast, despite being announced in pre-production materials, Robert Forster also did not appear due to scheduling conflicts and the role of Bob Sibley was played by Fred Grossinger (credited as Fred Holliday).[2] Despite prominent billing, Andrew Stevens and Chick Vennera only appear in archive footage from the end of Body Chemistry III. Stella Stevens is the only cast member to return. When announced at Cannes Film Festival, the film was billed as "the climax of the Body Chemistry series".[3]

Release[edit]

Just like Point of Seduction: Body Chemistry III, TV Guide panned the film, saying "Body Chemistry 4 stands on its own mediocre merits; the good news is you need not view the preceding three installments in the series, riffs on the subject of a philandering fella ruled by urges he can't turn on and off. Once the camera ogles Tweed's curves, the screenplay can take a nap; viewers take one look and understand immediately what the expression "a body to die for" means." and calls Poindexter "a colorless ball of handsomeness."[4] Meredith Berkman from Entertainment Weekly was also unimpressed, "Body Chemistry 4: Full Exposure represents the artless, tasteless side of the genre, the part that glorifies synthetic breasts and teeters on the brink of misogyny." adding that the film is "as laughable as it is predictable."[5]

Franchise[edit]

The film is the final instalment in the Body Chemistry franchise following the character of Claire Archer. It was preceded by Body Chemistry, Body Chemistry II: The Voice of a Stranger, Point of Seduction: Body Chemistry III and Body Chemistry IV: Full Exposure.

References[edit]

  1. ^ "Sun rises on Sunset with an initial slate of seven". The Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved Feb 21, 2024.
  2. ^ Matty Budrewicz and Dave Wain (June 2021). "A Fatally Attractive Foursome: The Body Chemistry Saga" (Podcast). The Schlock Pit. Retrieved Feb 21, 2024.
  3. ^ "Cannes: What's for sale at Market". Variety. Retrieved Feb 21, 2024.
  4. ^ "Body Chemistry IV: Full Exposure Review". tvguide.com. Fandom, Inc. 1995. Retrieved Feb 21, 2024.
  5. ^ Berkman, Meredith (1995). "Body Chemistry IV: Full Exposure". tvguide.com. Fandom, Inc. Retrieved Feb 21, 2024.

External links[edit]