Body Chemistry II: The Voice of a Stranger

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Body Chemistry II: The Voice of a Stranger
Directed byAdam Simon
Screenplay byJackson Barr
Christopher Wooden
Produced byAlida Camp
John Marshall
Roger Corman
Starring
CinematographyRichard Michalak
Edited byRichard Gentner
Music byNigel Holton
Production
company
Distributed byRCA/Columbia Pictures Home Video
Release date
  • December 13, 1991 (1991-12-13)
Running time
84 minutes
LanguageEnglish

Body Chemistry II: The Voice of a Stranger is a 1991 erotic thriller sequel directed by Adam Simon and written by Jackson Barr and Christopher Wooden. It is the second film in the Body Chemistry franchise, following the character of psychotic psychiatrist Dr. Claire Archer, here played again by Lisa Pescia.[1]

Plot[edit]

After a particularly ugly exchange on the radio with a caller, radio psychiatrist Dr. Edwards (John Landis), is fired by station owner Big Chuck (Morton Downey Jr.) and replaced by Dr. Claire Archer (Lisa Pescia). At the same time, former Los Angeles cop, Dan Peterson (Gregory Harrison) moves back home after being kicked off the force and reunited with his former high school sweetheart, Brenda (Robin Riker). But what Brenda doesn't know is that Dan is hiding a secret; he was abused as a child and the trauma has left him with a violent temper and an insatiable appetite for rough sex. Wanting to change and settle down with Brenda, Dan calls into Dr. Archer's radio programme for advice, intrigued by the voice of the stranger calling in, Dr. Archer offers to treat Dan in person. But they soon begin an affair and their dangerous sex spirals sadistically out of control.

Cast[edit]

Production[edit]

After the wild success of Body Chemistry, Roger Corman rushed a sequel into production.[2] Kristine Peterson did not return to direct the sequel and Adam Simon, who was offered to direct the original film, but declined due to his commitments on Brain Dead was hired instead.[3] Lisa Pescia is the only cast member to return from the original.[4]

Release[edit]

The film was released by the same labels in the United States and the UK that released the original film, RCA/Columbia Pictures Home Video[5] and 20:20 Vision[6] respectively. Lawrence Cohn gave the film a middling review in Variety saying Harrison "gives a sincere performance as a deeply troubled fellow" but that "Pescia is a one-dimensional, sexy villain". He adds that "Simon provides some style in his use of flashbacks, but the film crudely missteps by recycling a sex scene from Concorde's Naked Obsession; the old footage doesn't match."[7] Adrian Martin gave the film three stars, criticizing "Every scene is an elemental amalgam of sex, violence and madness – centred here especially on a disturbed gentleman (Gregory Harrison) whose psychosis is, as Pescia patiently explains, a result of "severe parental discipline, forced body contact sports, repressed homosexuality: the oldest story in the book" but adds "The intriguing aspect of the Body Chemistry films is that, in comparison to big-budget thrillers like Fatal Attraction, there is no pretence at psychological depth or social comment."[8] TV Guide labeled the film as sexist, commentiing "The (mostly male) filmmakers underscore their obvious paranoia about strong, dominant women with heavy film noir trappings--never before have so many Venetian blinds cast so many patterned shadows."[9]

The film was later released on DVD in the United States on May 22, 2001, by Concorde Home Video,[10] It was later released as a double feature with the original film, as The Body Chemistry Collection on DVD in 2003.[11]

Sequels[edit]

The film was followed by a further two sequels following the character of Claire Archer, Point of Seduction: Body Chemistry III and Body Chemistry IV: Full Exposure, but neither starred Lisa Pescia.[1] The role was recast with Shari Shattuck in Point of Seduction and Shannon Tweed in Full Exposure.

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b "Lisa Pescia". IMDb. 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. ^ James Gonis, Shawn Sheridan, Larry Strothe and Matt Weinhold (June 23, 2021). "CARNOSAUR KNOWLEDGE: A GUIDE TO FILMMAKING WITH ADAM SIMON!!!" (Podcast). monsterpartytv. Retrieved Feb 21, 2024.{{cite podcast}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  4. ^ "Body Chemistry II: The Voice of a Stranger". IMDb. Retrieved Feb 21, 2024.
  5. ^ "Body Chemistry II: Voice of a Stranger". VHSCollector. Retrieved Feb 21, 2024.
  6. ^ "Body Chemistry II: Voice of a Stranger". Video Collector. Retrieved Feb 21, 2024.
  7. ^ Cohn, Lawrence (January 4, 1993). "Body Chemistry II: The Voice of a Stranger". ProQuest. Variety. Retrieved Feb 21, 2024.
  8. ^ Martin, Adrian (December 1, 1993). "Body Chemistry II: The Voice of a Stranger". filmcritc.com.au. Adrian Martin. Retrieved Feb 21, 2024.
  9. ^ "Body Chemistry II: The Voice of a Stranger Review". tvguide.com. Fandom, Inc. 1992. Retrieved Feb 21, 2024.
  10. ^ "Body Chemistry 2 - The Voice of a Stranger DVD". Amazon.co.uk. Amazon. Retrieved Feb 21, 2024.
  11. ^ "Body Chemistry & Body Chemistry 2 Double Feature". Amazon.co.uk. Amazon. Retrieved Feb 21, 2024.

External links[edit]