A stronger Alan Rudolph movie - it benefits from an interesting idea (a salon of men discuss sex in 1929 with two female stenographers getting involved), a solid cast, some sex.
The chats aren't that interesting and indeed have dated in many ways - Gen Z are a lot more ahead of the group. Salon chat is hard to dramatise. It's stronger in scenes of peeople being affected by what's going on, particularly the women. The movie should have swapped some male characters for female and told it from female point of view. People like Julie Delpy and Tuesday Weld are under utilised.
Robin Tunney and Neve Campbell are stenographers.
Like a lot of Rudolph movies it feels like a Woody Allen film without as many laughs. The movie has strong moments then long period of blah. I gave it a half star because it had more energy and the good bits were good.
Less characters would have helped incidentally.