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In this collection of three stories, an emotionally abused
wife finds comfort in the arms of her brother-in-law, a young
dancer undertakes an erotic and redemptive pilgrimage to Rome
involving live sex shows and nude photography, and a femme
fatale looks into a mirror as she recalls a sadomasochistic
love affair...
Try
imagining an erotic version of Alfred Hitchcock Presents,
and you'll have some idea of what this DVD series is like.
Only less well made. Producer Tinto Brass has little direct
involvement with these short films, apart from introducing
each one while puffing away characteristically on a cigar,
and making the occasional cameo appearance.
Though
the productions claim to have been directed in the "Tinto
Brass style", there is scant evidence of it here. Only in
A Magic Mirror is there any hint of Brass's eccentricity,
in the grotesque character of a brusque layabout husband (Ronaldo
Ravello), who spends much of his screen time lounging around
in a bath, like the captain of the B-Ark in The Hitchhiker's
Guide to the Galaxy. But, although this tale displays
the most humour in the entire collection, it also shows off
the least amount of bare flesh, which is surely another important
ingredient that the audience will be expecting.
Things
get sexier in Julia, the story from which this collection
takes its name, which includes some particularly explicit
and highly charged sex scenes. Unfortunately, the plot is
almost totally incomprehensible - something to do with a dancer
(Anna Biella) going to Rome, but wildly at odds with the description
on the back of the sleeve, which mentions a photographer's
three beautiful models. I counted two of them at the most.
This production is also blighted by amateurish editing, which
leaves several gaping holes in the soundtrack. Oh well, at
least this DVD is subtitled, which spares us from woeful English
dubbing of the type recently heard on Brass's Private.
The
final tale, I Am the Way You Want Me, is a very weird
and nasty little minx. In it, a naked woman (Fiorella Rubino)
sprawls around in her bathroom, mouthing various strange utterances
to camera, and doing erotic things to herself, such as shaving
with a fearsome-looking cutthroat razor (shudder). And that's
about it.
A
further disappointment is the lack of any extra features.
So, all in all, this DVD has left me feeling rather brassed
off!
Chris
Clarkson

La-f952p Rev 1.0 Boardview Now
| Node / Component | Expected Function | Typical Location (Rev 1.0) | | :--- | :--- | :--- | | | 3V/5V Linear Regulators (System Power) | Near DC jack / Edge of board | | PU9501 | CPU VCore Controller (MP2969 or similar) | Near CPU socket, opposite side | | PU9001 | Charging IC (BQ24780S or BQ25710) | Adjacent to battery connector | | JDCR1 | Power Jack / USB-C Controller | Rear I/O corner | | VCC_CORE | CPU Main Power Rail | Large inductors (L950x) | | +1.8VSP | PCH/VDDQ | Small IC near PCH |
Today, we are analyzing the – a critical PCB found in modern Lenovo Legion gaming laptops (likely Gen 7 or 8 AMD/Intel variants). 1. What is the LA-F952P Rev 1.0? The "LA" prefix typically denotes a motherboard designed by LCFC (Lenovo China) . The F952P is the specific PCB model number, while Rev 1.0 indicates it is the first production revision. la-f952p rev 1.0 boardview
Summary for Technicians The LA-F952P Rev 1.0 is a complex but serviceable board. With the correct boardview file, repairing dead power, shorted CPU rails, or broken USB-C ports becomes a logical grid-search rather than a guessing game. Match your revision exactly (1.0 vs 1.1) – a Rev 1.1 boardview will mislead you on resistor locations. | Node / Component | Expected Function |
If you are a professional motherboard repair technician or an experienced hobbyist, you know that a schematic alone is often not enough. To truly diagnose shorts, missing lines, or component placement on a multi-layer PCB, you need the . The "LA" prefix typically denotes a motherboard designed
Published: [Current Date] | Category: Laptop Schematics & Boardview | Difficulty: Advanced
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£15.99
(Amazon.co.uk) |
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£15.49
(MVC.co.uk) |
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£15.49
(Streetsonline.co.uk) |
All prices correct at time of going to press.
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