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DisclosureRating:
Release Date: 04 February, 2003 Retail Price: $12.98 OUR Price: $9.99 You SAVE: $2.99! Cast: Complete Cast (11 total) |
Disclosure Reviews
Failed Forced Fellatio
Before Michael Douglas got married to Catherine Zeta Jones, and Demi Moore hooked up with Ashton Kutcher, I would have called this movie utterly ridiculous. But now, well, I guess it's possible that Moore would hook up with a corpse, and Douglas is slick enough to put roofies in a young, attractive woman's drink in order to take her home.
The story is a basic revenge story; only, the entire premise revolves around Demi Moore giving Michael Douglas a little fellatio, and Douglas refusing half way into it. Read that last sentence again; never mind, the movie is completely unbelievable.
Nonetheless, Moore's character, Slut Johnson, decides to sabotage Douglas' career. She charges him with sexual harassment and tries to make him look incompetent in front of the boss. Meanwhile, Douglas tries to keep his wife, who is much less attractive than Moore, from knowing about the fact that he played a game of "just the tip". Also, Douglas kicks him self over and over for not following through with the offer Moore gave him (strictly my interpretation of his emotional state during the latter half of the movie).
What tops this movie is the MOST UNREALISTIC virtual reality computer sequence EVER. Seriously, it's worse than those stupid montage scenes in Hackers. Yes, he puts on the glove, the goggles, and moves his hand around in some VR environment with angels and moving bodies and no blue-screen of death.
Eventually Douglas gets some help, figures out how to display his competency and innocence, gets to keep his job, and causes havoc throughout the company...but he still wishes he would have said yes to Moore in the first place.
Not bad
Tom Sanders (Michael Douglas) is a successful computer manager who is anticipating a promotion within his company. To his surprise, the position is given to Meredith Johnson (Demi Moore), a woman from another plant with whom Tom had an affair when he was a bachelor. Tom has a wife and kids now and he has no interest in starting things up again with Meredith, who is now his boss. One night Meredith makes a very blatant pass at Tom during a "business meeting." Tom comes to his senses just in the nick of time and rejects Meredith, who proceeds to freak out and then turns around and accuses Tom of sexual harassment. When the company tries to pacify Tom, he refuses to take it and countersues Meredith and the corporation. The company is in the final stages of securing a multi-million dollar merger, and Meredith and her fellow executives will stop at nothing to make sure they get what they want and that Tom stays out of their way.
"Disclosure" is not a brilliant movie by any means, but I found it to be very enthralling. Douglas is perfectly cast in the role of a man who refuses to be victimized by his female boss. Moore's performance is a bit lackluster, but her role in the film is actually pretty minimal: aside from the naughty almost-sex scene she shares with Douglas, her character basically just stalks around the office and shoots haughty looks at people across conference room tables. It actually works very well for this movie, which is the only reason I didn't mind watching her.
This might very well be the only Demi Moore movie besides "Ghost" that is worth watching. (In case you can't tell, I'm not a huge Demi Moore fan...but "Disclosure isn't half bad.)
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