Birth - Anatomy Of Love And Sex -1981- Repack
The caesarean section rate in the US was rising (hitting nearly 18% by 1981, up from 5% in 1970). Critics argued that the supine position (lying on the back, which compresses the sacrum and narrows the pelvic outlet) was not just bad obstetrics but bad sex. You cannot make love or birth a baby effectively lying flat on your back with your legs in stirrups.
The keyword “Birth - Anatomy of Love and Sex -1981-” is a time capsule. It is a reminder that the pelvis is not a fracture; it is a flower. The uterus is not a machine; it is a muscle of longing. And the moment of birth is not a medical extraction; it is the final, explosive stanza in the poem of physical love. Birth - Anatomy of Love and Sex -1981-
The film features several individuals playing themselves, alongside medical experts who provide narration and commentary: The caesarean section rate in the US was
(Annette Haven, gazing at a microscope slide) "The egg does not seek the sperm. It waits. And in that waiting, there is all the power in the universe." The keyword “Birth - Anatomy of Love and
Content overview
) is a Danish educational documentary directed by Marcer Andersen that provides a candid, clinical exploration of human development from conception through puberty. The 96-minute film is noted for using close-up cinematography and educational animations to cover topics like pregnancy, birth, and sexual development in a non-judgmental, scientific manner. For a full overview, visit Rare Film Finder The Birth (1981) - IMDb
