Family Business
Family Business
TV-MA | 21 February 2003 (USA)
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    Reviews
    Smartorhypo

    Highly Overrated But Still Good

    BroadcastChic

    Excellent, a Must See

    Keeley Coleman

    The thing I enjoyed most about the film is the fact that it doesn't shy away from being a super-sized-cliche;

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    Cissy Évelyne

    It really made me laugh, but for some moments I was tearing up because I could relate so much.

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    Nick Damian

    After all the hype about how talented he is and how creative he is.This guy doesn't offer anything that a 14 year old with a video camera can't do.After several episodes of this show, I was looking forward to something new. There's nothing new. Nothing original.To have a show that consists only of some pervert filming naked chicks is really poor quality programming.This should be on the Playboy channel or something. There are real filmmakers out there with talent and education and screenplays and film crews.This is an insult to everybody who went through film school only to be rejected and have some piece of crap host a film about porn.Porn is porn and it should be available to view, but to have an entire series dedicated to some freaks with a poor vocabulary is very sad.It's not talent or education. It's just garbage that kills 30 minutes or so.

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    peedur

    The line which separates the world of pornography and the social mainstream is real. It always will be so as long as their are laws to protect children. That line, thanks to shows like "Family Business" is not becoming fuzzier - its becoming clearer.A show like this doesn't "legitimize" the porn business any more than the internet does. Viewers do that. Since the internet caused porn to explode into mainstream consciousness so thoroughly, it's difficult to remember what it felt like to be scandalized about it. Therefore, it's smart and perfectly appropriate that this series document the progress of this shift public in awareness and a small part of it's impact by allowing cable viewers (whose porn fluency has become so much more engorged, so to speak) to gaze at it from another angle.Showtime has made a bold move in trying to de-mystify some of the the mechanism within the sex industry by unveiling the rather charming personality of a successful porn film director. What I found most interesting, apart from the fascinating nature of the business and those toiling within it, was my own ambivalent response to the series and its subject.One is forced to re-examine the tired clichés which have been the stock apprehensions about porn. The misgivings may still be legitimate, but they need to be thought through more carefully. This show is important as these issues are brought into the front of the mind. Adults, and parents particularly, should be equipped with genuine and complex answers about sexuality for children; the world has become so very much more complicated over the last six years.I particularly appreciated an episode wherein a family friend from Canada who wished to enter the industry was disuaded by everyone. (A statement made by Lila Glasser that men can easily maintain public respect that is generally denied to women within that business was delivered with great, understated pathos). The young girl in question exemplified an important difference between girls who enter that business because they like sex and think that it'll be fun, and those other girls who are compelled into the business by motives which are more profound and intense than simply a love of sex. They both say the same thing yet the difference is clear to those like Mr.Glasser who have seen hundreds of girls enter the business.(I am curious to know how Mr.Glasser's young son will be brought to understand the nature of his father's metier. Relationship, attachment and connection are important for youngsters; the sexual playacting staged by Daddy have the surface sheen of those things but in truth, have nothing to do with relationships in any meaningful sense.)While it has the patina of a reality show or a docu-drama, the nature of the topic and the (mostly) bias free presentation lend "Family Business" a more complex and layered message. By appearing so pleasantly inoffensive and unconfrontational, it effectively reframes the question to the viewer: where do you stand on the subject of commercial sexuality?

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    cficorp

    I'm no friend of porn (watched some, couldn't get to like them). And I'm no friend of soaps either. But this one is somewhere in between and quite intriguing.Technically speaking, the camera is shaky, pictures often slightly blurry, sound is ok. The editing is sometimes fast, sometimes steady - seems just right to me. Props - well, it seems to just be Seymore's (aka Adam Glasser) real house, the studio and the surroundings (nearby sex shops, strip clubs, a hotel hall, mall's parking lot). Story, simple: A porn producer and director trying to get a proper life outside of work.After watching the first three episodes I really want to know: Will he achieve the desperately sought after, steady relationship? Will cousin Stevie cheer up a little? Will Seymore's mom find a neighbour accepting her bookkeeping of an adult video producing business, and not stop talking to her?Well, I rate it to be 6 of 10.Maybe I like soaps after all...but don't tell my girlfriend ;-)

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    Tennessee_Rebel

    Family Business is a new show that focus's on Adam Glasser. A single father and a man who works in the adult film Industry. I enjoy this show very much, as it explores all the hard work that goes into making these films, and the lengths that they must go to, to get that perfect shot, and the perfect cast. It is aimed at the adult crowd, as it is not intended for the younger audience.

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