Virtual Sexuality (1999)

£0.00


Country: GB
Technical: col 92m
Director: Nick Hurran
Cast: Laura Fraser, Rupert Penry-Jones, Luke De Lacey

Synopsis:

A teenage girl trying to find a mate worthy of her virginity creates one by accident in a machine at a computer fair. A male extension of herself, he helps her gravitate towards the geeky introvert instead of the vacuous lothario.

Review:

Like most 'high-concept' movies this is a bunch of clichés hanging on a gimmick, and one whose humorous possibilities are not even played out, doubtless from the need to keep this in the adolescent market in terms of certification. Shot in bold, primary colours like a commercial for student banking, and featuring much pointless destruction, it is a pain in the head.

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Country: GB
Technical: col 92m
Director: Nick Hurran
Cast: Laura Fraser, Rupert Penry-Jones, Luke De Lacey

Synopsis:

A teenage girl trying to find a mate worthy of her virginity creates one by accident in a machine at a computer fair. A male extension of herself, he helps her gravitate towards the geeky introvert instead of the vacuous lothario.

Review:

Like most 'high-concept' movies this is a bunch of clichés hanging on a gimmick, and one whose humorous possibilities are not even played out, doubtless from the need to keep this in the adolescent market in terms of certification. Shot in bold, primary colours like a commercial for student banking, and featuring much pointless destruction, it is a pain in the head.


Country: GB
Technical: col 92m
Director: Nick Hurran
Cast: Laura Fraser, Rupert Penry-Jones, Luke De Lacey

Synopsis:

A teenage girl trying to find a mate worthy of her virginity creates one by accident in a machine at a computer fair. A male extension of herself, he helps her gravitate towards the geeky introvert instead of the vacuous lothario.

Review:

Like most 'high-concept' movies this is a bunch of clichés hanging on a gimmick, and one whose humorous possibilities are not even played out, doubtless from the need to keep this in the adolescent market in terms of certification. Shot in bold, primary colours like a commercial for student banking, and featuring much pointless destruction, it is a pain in the head.