The Stud
The Stud
R | 28 September 1979 (USA)
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Fontaine Khaled is the wife of a wealthy but boring businessman. She spends his money on her nightclub, The Hobo, and partying. She hires a manager, Tony, to run her club, but it is understood that his job security is dependent on him satisfying her nymphomaniac demands.

Reviews
Karry

Best movie of this year hands down!

Robert Joyner

The plot isn't so bad, but the pace of storytelling is too slow which makes people bored. Certain moments are so obvious and unnecessary for the main plot. I would've fast-forwarded those moments if it was an online streaming. The ending looks like implying a sequel, not sure if this movie will get one

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Erica Derrick

By the time the dramatic fireworks start popping off, each one feels earned.

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Scotty Burke

It is interesting even when nothing much happens, which is for most of its 3-hour running time. Read full review

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BA_Harrison

Based on the steamy best-seller by Jackie Collins, The Stud stars the author's older sister Joan as Fontaine Khaled, middle-aged wife of a wealthy businessman, who spends her time splashing her hubby's cash and screwing stud Tony Blake (Oliver Tobias), manager of her successful nightclub. Blake has bigger plans though: he intends to open his own happening establishment, steal Fontaine's clientele, and make off with her sexy step-daughter Alex (Emma Jacobs).An X-rated slice of disco-era smut, The Stud is pure '70s trash, with an asinine plot and wooden performances, but it was still a massive success, largely thanks to the nudity and nookie, with Joan baring all for the camera and being all kinds of naughty in an effort revive her flagging movie career. Curious crowds couldn't get enough.These days, The Stud is a dinosaur of a movie (although some might call it a 'time capsule'), but its tacky disco setting, silly melodrama and carefree attitude to casual sex are guaranteed to provide a good time for fans of camp cinema.Those who are watching purely to see Joan getting jiggy are treated to a spot of elevator sex that sees Tobias going down on the actress before going up, and an infamous orgy scene set in an opulent health spa which sees a buck naked Collins on a sex swing.As well as regular rumpy pumpy, the film also features a great soundtrack, with such acts as 10cc, Hot Chocolate, The Sweet, K.C. & The Sunshine Band and Odyssey accompanying the heaving dance floor scenes that make up a large part of the runtime.6.5/10, rounded up to 7 for the bittersweet ending in which Tony is left jobless, womanless, beaten and bloody, but relieved to be free of the rat race.

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Leofwine_draca

THE STUD is a slightly controversial big screen adaptation of one of Jackie Collins' potboiler novels, about the relationship between a nightclub manager and the wife of a bored businessman looking for a little excitement. This film is notable for featuring Joan Collins in an alluring role; in her mid-40s, she's more than happy to strip off as the part requires and her vibrant personality is very much a reason to tune in.Unfortunately, the rest of the film is something of a dated mess, and the most enjoyment I got from it were the various funky tunes placing in the various disco dancing scenes. It's an overlong movie and one that's padded to boot; the sex and dancing takes up a lot of the running time, and the rest of the plot is rather slim. Oliver Tobias is miscast as the wooden lead, and I simply didn't care about his predicament whatsoever. Sue Lloyd and Walter Gotell give good value in support, but the sex feels tepid rather than exciting and the end result tends to be 'is that what all the fuss was about?'.

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Neil Welch

The Stud is about Tony Blake, a handsome young man whose fortunes are tied to his ability to satisfy the sexual urges of influential women.This rather cheap and tatty British sexploitation movie must be the only movie (apart from its sequel, The Bitch) to be based on a novel by one woman, and starring her sister - Jackie Collins, purveyor of glossy erotic fiction in the Harold Robbins mold is the sister of Joan Collins, whose career was reinvigorated by this tosh.The erotic sequences are, frankly, not particularly erotic, although Miss C (Joan, that is) gamely gets 'em out for the lads for the first time at the age of 45, so points awarded to her for kudos (and also for looking pretty good).But this is essentially an overwrought bonkbuster, entertaining in a trashy sense on first viewing, but very much a product of its era, and further evidence that we British aren't very good at sex on screen.

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Poseidon-3

Ms. Collins is a survivor and has nearly always been willing to do whatever it took to hold on to some kind of career in acting, even though at the start she lacked the ambition to really push for success. After a period as a contract player for 20th Century Fox (often in roles that Marilyn Monroe rejected), Collins took some time to concentrate on marriage and children (a few of each, actually!) When she was ready to work steadily again, she found herself considered a relic of the 50's and wound up some really lame cinematic and television fare (and the occasional decent project.) She was close to the bottom when her husband at the time produced and she agreed to star in this film, a steamy, tawdry, silly film based on her sister Jackie's novel. She plays a wealthy, decadent socialite whose husband Gotell is an older, not particularly scintillating gentleman. One of his holdings is a discotheque, which Collins frequents and which is managed by the title character, portrayed by Tobias. Not only is Tobias taking care of the night club, he is also taking care of Collins' sexual needs. She films their interlude in an elevator and shows it to her best pal Lloyd who decides that she wouldn't mind trying Tobias out herself, despite her marriage to effete writer Burns. All four of them wind up involved in a hilarious pool orgy (which must be seen to be believed!) that ends when Tobias is asked to go places he's never considered. Unfortunately for Collins, playtime is over when her stepdaughter Jacobs gets wind of the sex tape and decides to take matters into her own hands (and other places.) If the plot sounds trashy in description, it's because the entire enterprise is trashy in the extreme! However, this was made at a time when disco was king, sex was free and easy (pre-AIDs) and hedonism was considered glamorous. By this, it would seem that all rich folks ever do is decide where their next sexual encounter will occur! That said, there are more than a few times when the film strays away from the erotic and strains under the weight of a lame storyline and shoddy acting. Collins occasionally looks a little tired here, most likely due to budgetary lighting, but other times is quite striking, especially when she shows up at the club in a dramatic up 'do. "Dynasty" fans will likely enjoy seeing her manipulate and copulate her way through the film though it is quite an eye-opener to see her cavorting naked when she's best known for TV roles in which only a little skin is shown. By the time she's wearing a huge, crimped, side-ponytail and smoking a joint, followed by various chlorinated frolicking and au naturel trapeze swinging (a homage to one of her most notable films "The Girl in the Red Velvet Swing"??) the majority of her TV audience's minds will have been blown. Tobias (who resembles what would result if Harry Hamlin and a circa 1978 Tommy Lee Jones procreated) is reasonably acceptable in his role. He has a clothing selection scene that must surely have inspired Paul Schraeder when he made "American Gigolo" a short time later. Though he's little known, Tobias actually went on to have a pretty steady career in films. Jacobs is decent enough, but really no one could do much with all the sordid material in the script. Cotell is recognizable as a supporting actor in several James Bond films. Lloyd, Burns and Fisher (who plays another Collins crony who hangs out at the disco) would all come back for the sequel "The Bitch", a year later. The film features a soundtrack of songs that were actual hits of the era, which makes the extended, murky shots of the dancing a little bit more easy to bear, though no one on the dance floor is in danger of dethroning John Travolta (or even Karen Lynn Gorney!) This film, along with its sequel, was a double-edged sword for Collins. On one hand, it represents a headlong dive into exploitation, tastelessness and mediocrity. On the other hand, its box office success helped get her name and face out there again and allowed her to show the world that she was up to the task of portraying the type of mega-bitch that she became on "Dynasty", a move that cemented her financial security forever.

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