Trust Cash Markman to provide ridiculous dialog, heavy on sexist cliches, to try and ruin this routine sex comedy from Jiim Enright for Wicked Pictures. The busty femme cast are called upon to save the day.
Tom Chapman gets a lead role, a guy on his first date with Jordan McKnight. Lucky for him he has an imaginary Black friend broadly played by Julian St. Jox, who we learn is a figment of Tom's imagination, drawn from the pages of Hustler magazine, where The Cool Dude writes a typically fake advice column.
Rest of the movie, en route to the inevitable consummation of Jordan & Tom in bed, we witness sort-of-flashbacks introduced by the nonexistent Julian and real flashbacks from Tom.
Heather Lee features prominently in these scenes, styled with uncharacteristic cornrow braided hairdo, and the unfunny jokes pile up. Writer Markman even has the temerity to throw in Lauren Bacall's famous line about kissing from "To Have and Have Not".
It's stupid and insulting throughout, merely an excuse to focus on massive mammaries, not the booty. Despite its mediocrity, Wicked saw fit to reissue it a decade later on DVD.
Tom Chapman gets a lead role, a guy on his first date with Jordan McKnight. Lucky for him he has an imaginary Black friend broadly played by Julian St. Jox, who we learn is a figment of Tom's imagination, drawn from the pages of Hustler magazine, where The Cool Dude writes a typically fake advice column.
Rest of the movie, en route to the inevitable consummation of Jordan & Tom in bed, we witness sort-of-flashbacks introduced by the nonexistent Julian and real flashbacks from Tom.
Heather Lee features prominently in these scenes, styled with uncharacteristic cornrow braided hairdo, and the unfunny jokes pile up. Writer Markman even has the temerity to throw in Lauren Bacall's famous line about kissing from "To Have and Have Not".
It's stupid and insulting throughout, merely an excuse to focus on massive mammaries, not the booty. Despite its mediocrity, Wicked saw fit to reissue it a decade later on DVD.