Frances Ferguson is a quirky film
from the POV of a sex female offender. Frances
has been married to Nick (Keith Poulson) for three years. Happy at first, but
now with a small child Nick takes to masturbating in his car before coming in
from work and is having an affair.
Frances, a substitute teacher is
assigned to watch over a disciplinary class with one student with one boy, named Jake (Jake French) and leaps into a
sexual affair with him, for which she is arrested.
Kaley Wheless, the films lead, is
one of the most beautiful and alluring women
I have ever seen on film and Bill Wise, as her parole officer, steals the
film. The always wonderful and very talented
David Krumholtz has a great part as the community mental health counselor. I believe
that Krumholtz is some sort of acting genius, he never fails to deliver. Martin
Starr’s character probably has the best dialogue in the film, and it comes
along just in time, when the film just ever so lightly starts to drag.