Lipstick Camera (1994)Ambitious young woman wants to get into TV news. She borrows a small camera from a friend and obtains incriminating pictures that two former East German spies are after. Director:Mike Bonifer |
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Lipstick Camera (1994)Ambitious young woman wants to get into TV news. She borrows a small camera from a friend and obtains incriminating pictures that two former East German spies are after. Director:Mike Bonifer |
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| Complete credited cast: | |||
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Brian Wimmer | ... |
Flynn Dailey
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| Ele Keats | ... |
Omy Clark
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| Corey Feldman | ... |
Joule Iverson
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| Terry O'Quinn | ... |
Raymond Miller
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| Sandahl Bergman | ... |
Lilly Miller
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| Charlotte Lewis | ... |
Roberta Dailey
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| Richard Portnow | ... |
Detective Vorkopich
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Sheila Wills | ... |
Stand Up Reporter
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| Steven J. Evans | ... |
Cameraman
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Nancy Goodstein | ... |
TV Reporter #2
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Ambitious young woman wants to get into TV news. She borrows a small camera from a friend and obtains incriminating pictures that two former East German spies are after. Written by frankfob2@yahoo.com
The behavior of the characters in "Lipstick Camera" is so positively Martian that it makes the characters of R.L. Stein (author of teen horror books) seem as fleshed-out as those of Jane Austin.
The protagonist is a self-absorbed young woman obsessed with a videographer. She pesters him and annoys him and does stupid things that get him threatened and beaten up, which of course leads him to fall in lust with her and bang her tenderly in the glow of a video fireplace.
Throw in a Commie war criminal, a blackmailing hooker, and a mooning video-geek who may or not have been making snuff films, and you have the most unlikable cast of characters since John Updike wrote the "Rabbit" series.
For all its flaws, "Lipstick Camera" is enjoyable as an example of something so bad you marvel that it was ever produced. It would make a good choice for a "Mystery Science Theatre 3000" type party.