Brooke Shields revealed on “The Drew Barrymore Show” that she received a call from “Blue Lake” director Randall Kleiser after the release of her new documentary “Pretty Baby: Brooke Shields.” In the documentary, the actress claimed that the film exploited her sexuality at the age of 14.

“They wanted to make it a reality show,” Shields says in the documentary, referring to the film “Blue Lake” and other films she made as a teenage actress. “They wanted to sell my real sexual awakening. The irony was that I had no intercourse of my own.”

In the movie “The Blue Lake” the actress starred alongside Christopher Atkins. The actors play two teenagers stranded on a tropical island who experience puberty together and fall in love. The film is one of several that Shields cites in the documentary as taking advantage of her at such a young age. Other film credits are: “The Doll of New Orleans” by Louis Mallet and “Endless Love” by Franco Zeffirelli.

During her appearance on “The Drew Barrymore Show,” Shields was asked if any of her directors tried to contact her after the documentary was released. Both Male and Zeffirelli have since died, but Kleiser is still alive and according to her he tried to contact her.

“I saw his name on my phone and I was like, ‘Oh, what should I do?’ and I let it go to voicemail,” Shields said of Kleiser. “Because I said, ‘I want to see what the purpose is.’ He wanted to talk. I don’t know why, but I don’t feel like bringing any of that back up again.”

Shields added: “That’s not what it’s about. It was for these males who needed me to be in a certain category to serve their story, and it was never about me, they didn’t protect me. It was fun and loving at times, but I was a pawn, I was a piece of meat, I was a commodity.”