Cast overview, first billed only: | |||
Mark Adair-Rios | ... |
Male Security Guard
(as Mark Adair Rios)
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Jason Bercy | ... |
Messenger
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Brian Bloom | ... |
Brad
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Michael Cudlitz | ... |
Bob
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Jim Czarnecki | ... |
Teacher
(as James Czarnecki)
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Freda Foh Shen | ... |
Marge
(as Freda Fo Shen)
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Life Garland | ... |
Crip
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Penny Griego | ... |
Anchorwoman
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Elizabeth Guber | ... |
Operator
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Bob Hoskins | ... |
Joey
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Carrie Ann Inaba | ... |
Hiromi
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Ira Israel | ... |
Ira
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Gary Jensen | ... |
Stunt Coordinator
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Ron Jeremy | ... |
Desk Sargeant
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Lamont Johnson | ... |
Nick
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A woman, fed up with her father's double standards, decides to lose her virginity.
There is no way around the conclusion that this production was a major embarrassment to everyone associated with it and a career breaker to some.
Castwise, Mena Suvari and Gabriel Mann somehow manage to maintain their dignity despite the total meltdown around them and Alexandra Wentworth actually turns in an excellent performance in one of the supporting roles. But Bob Hoskins and Robert Loggia are unbelievably awful and the rest of the cast are not much better.
The concept was fairly original or at least the most extreme take on an unoriginal concept, but at the last minute it gutlessly pulls back for a lame moralistic ending.
The directing, production design, and editing are all about as bad as you will find in a mainstream production. Bad enough that the movie would be a useful bad example for students in film school.