Full Frontal
Full Frontal ★½ 2002 (R)
Despite its suggestive title, Soderbergh's film is arty, meandering, and uninvolving. Shot mostly on digital video in 18 days, the director's unofficial sequel to “sex, lies and videotape” tracks the loosely related lives and loves of various Los Angeles movie business types working on a film called “Rendezvous” over a 24-hour period. Katt, hilarious as a self-involved stage actor playing Hitler; Keener, as the somewhat demented Lee; and masseuse McCormack are the real standouts. However, improvfeel performances are good all around, with canny insider humor. The film's ambiguous presentation, including voiceovers, plays within movies, and movies-within-movies-within movies (whew!), undermine its intention to reveal the whole Hollywood circus that is really best kept under wraps. 101m/C VHS, DVD . US David Duchovny, Nicky Katt, Catherine Keener, Mary McCormack, David Hyde Pierce, Julia Roberts, Blair Underwood, Enrico Colantoni, Dina Spybey; D: Steven Soderbergh; W: Coleman Hough; C: Steven Soderbergh.