Movie |
Breast | Surgeon
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5.8/10
IMDbBest Edited TwoHour Movie for NonCommercial Television | 1998 | Michael
Best Miniseries or Motion Picture Made for Television | 1998
Best Actress in a Supporting Role in a Miniseries or a Motion Picture Made for Television | 1998 | Louise
The movie was filmed in mid-1997, with a planned October release date. However, when the producers discovered that October was Breast Cancer Awareness Month, they changed the release date to December 1997.
The movie very loosely tracks the history of the real-life breast implant phenomenon, for its radical introduction through its popularity, through the controversial link of its silicone base to various types illnesses and cancers (culminating in the Food and Drug Administration's moratorium on use of silicone in breast implants, leading the industry to use saline implants, instead).
Star Drug Store has been a Galveston, Texas fixture since 1917. Its exterior, with its distinctive ceramic Coca-Cola sign, is seen in several scenes, and Schwimmer's character uses a pay phone in the back of the soda fountain. It burned in 1998, shortly after the movie was released, and was closed for three years, before re-opening in 2001.
The parking garage scene is filmed from the roof of the Continental Center garage, with a building in the former Enron complex in Houston, Texas visible in the right of the shot.
Emily Procter was in a season 2 episode of Friends, the show in which David Schwimmer starred in
"Male Interviewer: Lisanne - 32A, Magazine Editor. [claps board] Lisanne: You want the bra off too? Male Interviewer: Yeah. Lisanne: Now, you're not showing my face, are you? Female Interviewer: No. Lisanne: Okay. Because I would die if anyone knew I was doing this. Hold on. [With her face out of our view, Lisanne reaches behind her back, unhooks her bra, and takes it off revealing her fist-sized breasts] Lisanne: There. There you have it. What do you want me to say? Female Interviewer: How do you feel about your breasts? Lisanne: How do I feel about my breasts? Well... how would *you* feel about them? I have gone to the Dentist and had tools laid on my chest as though it was a tray, as though it was a totally flat place upon which a person can unthinkingly lay their things on and, you know, get 'em later... I know that you guys probably don't like it that I'm getting the operation because you're feminists or, you know, something. I don't know. Female Interviewer: No. No, we're not trying to make any judgements here. Lisanne: Okay. Well, that's good. Because I don't really care if you did, 'cause I would just say, "Kiss my ass." I mean... I'm doing this for me, and I don't care what anybody says. I want to have big tits."
"Male Interviewer: Arlene - Mary Kay Rep. [claps board] Arlene: Can I borrow your pencil? [With her face out of view, Arlene receives a pencil, then opens her blouse, baring her breasts. She talks to us] Arlene: This is called the pencil test. It's supposed to fall to the floor. [She puts the pencil under her left breast. The pencil doesn't fall] Arlene: I love my children, but I'm a little resentful for what they did to my breasts. [She removes the pencil and returns it] Arlene: Thanks. It's like someone blew up a balloon and then they let all the air out."