Dear Rosie is a 1990 British short film directed by Peter Cattaneo from a script by Peter Morgan and Mark Wadlow. The plot follows Rosie, an unsuccessful novelist who begins receiving letters from overweight people after her agent publishes her diet tips. The film was nominated for an Oscar for Best Live Action Short Film.
Brian Bonkworthy (segment "Fantasy Woman")
In "Fantasy Woman," Brian Bonkworthy (Ricky Diamond) imagines owning his own lingerie shop and a succession of well-proportioned customers help flesh out his fantasy as they try on revealing outfits. "Bare Facts" is set in a law firm run by a divorced couple who investigate a health spa that claims to increase bust size with the use of a special cream.
Paramedic
寄生体を転々と変えつつ殺戮を繰り返す異星人、それを追うFBIとロス市警の刑事たちそれぞれの闘いを描いた作品。アヴォリアッツ映画祭グランプリ作品。主役はK・マクラクラン。
(segment "Electric Blue Party")
Electric Blue goes down under again, this time from the 1987 America's Cup in Perth. Our hostesses, a pair of gorgeous Aussie models, pose for the cameras amidst the action on Freemantle Harbour, and again later while jet-boating down the Swan River. Also features main story "Adult Fairy Tale" about a resurrected sorceress, an Electric Blue party featuring celebrity impersonators, the Aussie strip revue "Rage with a Raunchy Lady" and a profile on Page 3 girl Gail Thackray (aka Gail Harris), who is interviewed and even skydives naked.
Castaway (segment "S.O.S Girls Go Overboard")
Debee Ashby, Cindy Milo and Nickie Christie are in Barbados on location for the Electric Blue team. Meanwhile, Ricky Diamond is castaway on a desert island. Bad jokes and great tits ensue. In "Blind Date," Tamara (Tami Lee Curtis) is an ordinary Valley girl, whose mother (Carol Connors) sets her up on a blind date with nerdy Henry (Rick Savage). But Henry turns out to be an international spy, and the pair are whisked off on an adventure featuring a beautiful princess, a fabulous jewel, and the world's greatest Omar Sharif impersonator. Other briefer segments involve a nude disco, nude body painting and "Satin & Lace," a tongue-in-cheek look at lingerie covering the Elizabethan and Victorian eras.