
Archaeologist Walter and his wife Laura are working at a dig on a small island off the coast of Sweden. One day Laura catches Walter having a go at it with his sexy assistant, Anna. Laura calls in her old friend--and former lesbian lover--Hanni to help get her revenge on Walter by having she and Hanni seduce Anna.

**The geometry of manipulation**
In the isolation of a coastal villa in Sweden, the fragile balance of a marriage shatters when Laura (the sexy and delightful Mary Mendum) catches her husband, archaeologist Walter, cheating with his beautiful assistant Anna (a seductive Cathja Graff, so bland we'll never see her in another role). Far from seeking direct confrontation or reproach, Laura opts for a sophisticated architecture of revenge. To regain control of her marriage, Laura invites her close ally Hanni (Anita Ericsson) to the island, intending for her to seduce Anna, thus emotionally displacing Walter. Gabrielle (Anita Redling) joins this complex game of mirrors, completing a circle of manipulation where desire is used as a currency of power. The plot unfolds like an erotic chess game where Laura seeks not only to punish her husband's betrayal but also to reaffirm her absolute sovereignty over the desires of those around her, transforming her environment into instruments of her own pleasure.
“Laura's Toys” is a sophisticated work that departs from the linear narrative of exploitation cinema, and where Joseph W. Sarno brings his own style and demonstrates his ability to elevate erotic transgression to the level of a psychological chamber drama. The film's effectiveness rests on the chemistry of its four female leads: Cathja Graff brings a necessary, vulnerable simplicity, becoming the object of the conflict, while Anita Ericsson and Anita Redling function as the perfect catalysts for the schemes of Mary Mendum, who commands the screen with an aristocratic coolness.