| Index | 5 reviews in total |
26 out of 29 people found the following review useful:
Exceptional., 19 March 2006
Author:
Chris Barry from Canada
This is a great documentary about women and their relationships with
their breasts. It was shown on TVO here in Canada quite a bit but I
don't know how widely it was distributed. I think Mpix some cable
channel in the States screened it a couple of times.
It's really interesting to watch women's reactions to their own
breasts. Virtually none of them, with the notable exception of one
fabulous modern dancer, are really comfortable with having them and
they have a hard time figuring out why men love boobs so much. As a
man, I have to say, the mysteries of nature are quite perplexing and
obviously not resolved in this 50 minute doc, but if there's one thing
I have to say about this program it really gave me insight into women's
feelings about their bodies. I recommend everyone watch this wonderful
doc.
4 out of 4 people found the following review useful:
An intimate glance into female body image, 20 February 2008
![]()
Author:
My Two Lips from United States
The hour-long documentary Breasts directed by Meema Spadola (who also
made a film called Private Dicks: Men Exposed) is a great resource for
open dialogue about female bodies, specifically, breasts. Composed of a
range of viewpoints--large and small, young and old--the film allows
the women to talk about how they feel about their upper bodies and how
breasts affect their interactions with the world. Although I am not
sure I learned much from watching the film, it was refreshing to hear
other opinions on breasts.
I watched the movie with a male friend of mine who I assumed wouldn't
enjoy the film much, but afterward we talked a little bit about his
experiences. The film was a good jumping off point for the two of us to
discuss other body issues that women have and initiated a few questions
about breasts and how women might feel about them. He thought, though,
there could have been a larger diversity of breasts and viewpoints and
that by limiting the film to 22 voices, many of whom are only shown in
specific segments, there were a lot of perspectives excluded.
I thought the film attempted to show women from various walks of life,
but it is true that many of my own feelings about breasts were not
echoed in what the women on-screen were saying. I did particularly
enjoy the mother-daughter pairs who appeared together and discussed not
only their own bodies but their feelings about each other's bodies. I
think these scenes revealed a lot about how women feel about the bodies
of those around them. I also particularly enjoyed the historic clips
that were interspersed throughout the interviews because they did a lot
to show different ways in which breasts have been depicted over time as
well as kept the tone of the film lively.
One issue I did have is that the film raised the question of the power
of breasts, something my male friend immediately picked up on and was
joking about, without doing much to provide an answer. None of the
women really were able to describe the power of having breasts in a
clear manner. Instead, it came off as a vague and questionable notion.
I would have liked to have seen a few more academic and scientific
voices in the mix that could have possibly explained things like
biological reasons for the power of breasts and sociological and
psychological points of interest. However, as a film that provides a
frank glance at what some women think about their breasts, I thought
this film was worth seeing. Only an hour long, it easily held my
attention and I was disappointed when it was over.
Even though many women assume that they are the target audience, I
think this film is particularly appropriate for men. It allows them an
opportunity to see women's bodies through the eyes of the women they
belong to and to understand a little about what breasts mean to those
of us who have them. I also thought the film would be an excellent
resource for women with questions about body image who might need some
reassurance that the way they feel about their breasts is completely
normal.
Come Fill The Cup, 8 December 2009
![]()
Author:
Van Roberts (zardoz@bellsouth.net) from United States
*** This review may contain spoilers ***
First things first, director Meema Spadola's 50-minute documentary
entitled "Breasts" presents the subject matter in a light that is
neither erotic nor pornographic. Okay, there is a black & white excerpt
from a cartoon where a guy licks and sucks on a breast and when he
withdraws his affection and the nipple curls up seductively like a
beckoning fingers and wiggles to lure him back for more. Otherwise,
this is a no-frills documentary about twenty-two women discussing their
breasts. Second, this is also a lightweight documentary that consists
primarily of women either bare breasted or covered up who talk about
their boobs. Spadola examines breasts from many perspectives, including
both power and pleasure. Interspersed among these candid conversations
about breasts, breast size, and the reduction or elimination of breasts
are cartoons and commercials.
The women vary in age and size, ranging from the flat-chested variety
to the obese. One woman discusses having the lack of breasts and how
her husband said it didn't bother him, but she knew that he was lying.
This woman missed her breasts, because they had to be removed, and
contends that having no breasts affected sex between her partner and
her. At the outset, the women provide all the synoymons for breasts:
boobs, tits, titties, knockers, balls of ice cream, baby bottles, etc.
According to these women, men are fascinated with big breasts because
they symbolize motherhood. One woman talks about her feelings after she
lost one breast to cancer and Spadola shows her torso with one large
breast and a smooth white area where the other breast was once located.
We're told that silicone implants were hastily put into place for the
money, but that these implants later created problems for women.
Eventually, in 1992, silicone implants were no longer put into women's
breasts. Mind you, we see all kinds of breasts, a few are gorgeous, but
most are average, with big nipples, small nipples, etc. One woman talks
about how her husband told her not to show her entire breast because he
considered it an invasion of his privacy. In other words, his wife's
breasts belonged to him as much as her and he did not want to share
this privacy with outsiders.
This is a mildly interesting but overall disposable look at breasts.
The women who sought breast reductions point out how their doctors
changed the size of their breasts. Women nursing children said that
their breasts made them feel better about themselves. Indeed, some of
the women in the documentary, especially the huge woman should never
have taken her top off, but presumably this is what makes "Breasts" a
liberating experience. Again, if you've got beer and pizza and figure
that you're going to get aroused by what Meema Spadola shows in this
lightweight documentary, think again. Ultimately, men who watch this
documentary will definitely come away from it with a better
understanding not only of the power of breasts, but also they will
learn more about breasts.
1 out of 2 people found the following review useful:
Beautiful and real!, 16 May 2006
![]()
Author:
Gordon Vincent from Austin, Texas
*** This review may contain spoilers ***
This is a wonderful look, you should pardon the pun, at 22 women
talking about breasts-- theirs, their mothers', other women's, and how
they affect so many aspects of their lives. Young girls, old women, and
everyone in between (with all shapes, sizes, configurations, etc) talk
about developing, reacting, celebrating, hiding, enhancing, or reducing
their breasts.
It's charming, delightful, sad, funny, and everything in between.
Intercut with documentary footage and clips from those famous old
"young women's films" that the girls got taken to the cafeteria to see,
the interviews are a fascinating window for men who love women & their
breasts into what the other half has to say when they don't know you're
listening.
0 out of 1 people found the following review useful:
a serious look at (insert other name here), 28 May 2009
![]()
Author:
MisterWhiplash from United States
Let's get this out of the way, so the ones checking out this page
looking for info on anything related to the word "Breasts" (and you
know who you are, googlers) can move along: this is not in any way
pornographic. On the contrary, if this has any value as masturbation
material then, frankly, the filmmaker didn't do a good job since the
aim is to keep it on subject and on the experiences of women and their
bodies and images of themselves and society and health and so on.
Indeed, I would be a little circumspect of one who came across this on
DVD or, if it ever plays again, late night on HBO or Cinemax and used
it as a means for pleasure. You might as well go to the supermarket and
pick up a pair of ripe melons and take them home and squeeze them and
uh, well, you get the idea.
No, this is semi-serious film-making meant for premium late-night
viewing, but it shouldn't have to be just for the late-night types.
This is intimate in setting but not in tone. All of the women, in all
their variety of shapes and sizes, and races, and even with one man
thrown in with fake breasts, have something of value to say, from life
experience in the most straightforward way. If I say semi-serious it's
due to the several little segments that the director feels she needs to
throw in, with the archival footage of old "how-to" videos about
puberty and sex and breasts and super-rare cartoons with the knockers
flying about. This isn't a problem but an asset: we need a few little
visual seg-ways to go between these interviews.
Nothing is held back, and we see it as feminism in a liberating form:
they don't need to cover up, and even if they choose not to take their
tops and shirts and bras off they're still open as can be about a
natural part of their body that is an object of sex, surprise, comfort,
discomfort, curiosity, motherhood, and, sadly, cancer. In that last
part, there's another brave step taken as we see a woman who survived
her cancer with only one breast. You know you've become mature and an
adult when you can see this woman who has somehow gone on to live a
semi-normal life with one breast (the most bittersweet moment is when
she says if a fairy godmother said she could have one wish to have two
full breasts she would have to think about it), and you don't snicker
or go "eww, gross." That's the test, folks.
It's not shot under the best of circumstances, but then again for TV
it's edited with a tight pace. It's never dull for a moment, and we
never feel like anyone is holding back, especially when a man might
hear the hard truth like that breasts may not really be erogenous, or
that a flat chest is very attractive to some men. Breasts: A
Documentary is about deconstructing myths with real faces and breasts
and minds and hearts laid bare. If that's worthy of a "I was alone"
session, then, well, more power to you, I guess, though it's not the
intention.
| Plot summary | Amazon.com summary | Ratings |
| External reviews | Plot keywords | Main details |
| Your user reviews | Your vote history |