
Aroused is a feature documentary film capturing the making of a Fine Art photographic book shot by Deborah Anderson, featuring 16 of the Worlds most successful Adult film Stars. As questions are asked in this intimate film, the girls reveal more than just their naked skin.... (Full plot summary below)
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Aroused is a feature documentary film capturing the making of a Fine Art photographic book shot by Deborah Anderson, featuring 16 of the Worlds most successful Adult film Stars. As questions are asked in this intimate film, the girls reveal more than just their naked skin.
Leave your thoughts about Aroused.
| Shared DarknessBrent SimonAn uncommonly intelligent doc exploration of the inner lives of 16 women in the adult film industry; has an easy, unforced quality to go with its acuity, allowing the humanity and vulnerability of its subjects to come through. |
| Village VoiceInkoo KangAspires to be a consciousness-raising documentary but is only as deep as a tube of lipstick. |
| Punch Drunk CriticsMae AbdulbakiAroused is definitely a documentary worth watching if only for the unique point of view and approach that Anderson chooses to take. |
| Movie MetropolisJames Plath'Aroused' is well done, and like the best documentaries and the best artwork it alters the way you see a subject and the way you think about things. But it is NOT arousing. |
| RedEyeMatt PaisIt's tough not to wish Anderson, who fortunately moves away from initial, obvious statements about how sex sells, tried harder to get the full story. |
| NewsBlazePrairie MillerFaux feminist quotes ridiculously compare the porn stars to Anais Nin, Joan of Arc and yes, Eleanor Roosevelt. As Anderson cheers them while they get gussied up for oral, anal and mock rape scenes, exposing their souls way less than flashing flesh. |
| The New York TimesJeannette CatsoulisThe women share their dreams, their thoughts on relationships and some of the hazards of their work. The serious, thoughtful responses carry the film. |
| Los Angeles TimesSheri LindenThe impulse to profile "the world's most sexualized women" is a worthy one. But little sense of individuality emerges in Aroused. |
| New York TimesNicole HerringtonIt has an inviting softness, but the background music, odd camera angles, close-ups and lingering shots only distract and objectify. |
| NYC Movie GuruAvi OfferLeaves you undernourished both intellectually and emotionally. |