Sex and the Other Woman

1972 British film by Stanley Long

  • 30 December 1972 (1972-12-30)
Running time
88 minutesCountryUnited KingdomLanguageEnglish

Sex and the Other Woman (also known as The Other Woman) is a 1972 British sex comedy film directed by Stanley A. Long, presented by Richard Wattis.[1] It comprises a quartet of stories on the subject of adultery.

Plot

Following a short opening sequence in which a henpecked husband finds relief from his wife's nagging by employing the use of a sex doll, the film's presenter tells a quartet of stories concerning adultery and infidelity. The first concerns Lisa, a flirty miniskirted office secretary, who seduces married fellow office worker Chris The second story involves Liz, a gold-digging model, who becomes involved with a married and rich tennis player, including seducing him in his private jet, and then leaves him when his divorce from his wife Flora leaves him penniless. In the third story Guy, a middle-aged man, is seduced by his daughter Louise's eighteen-year-old schoolfriend Sarah when he offers to paint her portrait. The fourth story involves cheating husband Ted whose affair with his wife's best friend results in him sharing a house with both his wife and his mistress.

Cast

  • Richard Wattis as presenter
  • Maggie Wright as Liz
  • Jane Cardew as Lisa
  • Felicity Devonshire as Sarah
  • Bartlett Mullins as Henry
  • Peter Dunn as Chris
  • Anthony Bailey as Reggie
  • Raymond Young as Guy
  • Max Mason as Ted
  • Louise Pajo as Shirley
  • Margaret Burton as Flora
  • Peggy Ann Clifford as Henry's wife
  • Jeremy Nicholas as Arthur
  • Louise Rush as Louise
  • Mary Barclay as Cynthia
  • Barbara Meale as Barbara
  • Kay Adrian as Flora's friend
  • Barbara Wendy as Sally
  • Gordon Gale as Arnold
  • Gillian Brown as Sue
  • Anthony Howard as Managing Director
  • Stacey Davies as Kershaw
  • Olive Mercer as fleaner
  • Stella Tanner as mother-in-law

Critical reception

Monthly Film Bulletin wrote: "Four tales of adultery, thematically linked by the energy and sexual initiative attributed to Other Women of all ages and sizes. Any hopes aroused by Richard Wattis' sardonic presentation that Sex and the Other Woman may prove less formulary than rival 'sex surveys' are dashed as soon as the first episode creaks its cumbersomely plotted way to some predictably inexplicit scenes of love-making. The film makes the usual comic capital out of sexual guilt – hasty copulation on the office couch, speeded-up motion as the characters hurriedly don their clothes after infidelity – while elsewhere script, direction and acting prove equally unconvincing."[2]

References

  1. ^ "Sex and the Other Woman". British Film Institute Collections Search. Retrieved 30 November 2023.
  2. ^ "Sex and the Other Woman". Monthly Film Bulletin. 40 (468): 35. 1973 – via ProQuest.
  • Sex and the Other Woman at IMDb
  • Sex and the Other Woman at ReelStreets


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