Sexina

2007 American film From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Sexina (also known as Popstar Private Eye and Sexina: Popstar P.I.) is a 2007 American comedy film starring Lauren D'Avella and Adam West.[1][2]

Directed byErik Sharkey
Written byErik Sharkey
Produced byLauren D'Avella
Adam West
Annie Golden
Cash Tilton
Distributed byWild Eye Releasing
Quick facts Directed by, Written by ...
Sexina
Directed byErik Sharkey
Written byErik Sharkey
Produced byLauren D'Avella
Adam West
Annie Golden
Cash Tilton
Distributed byWild Eye Releasing
Release date
  • 2007 (2007)
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
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The film is written and directed by Erik Sharkey in his directorial debut and features a theme song by The Monkees band member Davy Jones.[1] The film is distributed by Wild Eye Releasing.[1][2]

The film was screened at the 2007 Fort Lauderdale International Film Festival.[3] A DVD release happened in 2014, and upon this release the theatrical release title was shortened from Sexina: Popstar P.I. to simply Sexina.[4]

Plot

Blonde beautiful pop star Sexina is also a crime fighting private eye who discovers that a former rock star turned scientist has engineered a robot boy band at the behest of the evil bossman of Glitz records.

Cast

  • Lauren D'Avella as the title character, Sexina; "Sexina (Lauren D’Avella) is the reigning queen of the pop universe. By night (or whatever), she’s a black-leather-clad crime fighter, busting corruption in the music industry."[3]
    • Luis Jose Lopez as Lance Canyon; "...Sexina's strongest competition, the egocentric womanizer Lance Canyon (Luis Jose Lopez)."[4]
  • Adam West as the film's villain, leader of Glitz Records; "...“The Boss” of Glitz Records (Adam West! Really!), who’s trying to take over the music world with a robotic boy band...."[3]
    • Cash Tilton as the scientist whose technology has been exploited by Adam West's villain[4]
  • Kelly Fernald as Vera; "...about a high school reject (Vera, played by Kellie Fernald) getting even with her mean-girl tormentors and doing it with the football team’s star quarterback."[3] Vera is also the winner of an essay contest that leads Sexina to performing at her high school.[4]
    • Ronald J. Zambor as the quarterback that Vera has a crush on.[4]
  • Annie Golden, who has a cameo role of about one minute.[4]

Critical reception

DVD Talk, "Sexina is not a painful experience, far from the worst the genre has to offer (even landing ever-so-slightly above the median), but it's a directionless movie, a collection of middling jokes collected in a kitchen sink. Writer / director Erik Sharkey takes a bunch of ideas and refuses to make an overt effort to glue them all together, half-heartedly aiming at his handful of satirical targets with a looseness that practically disqualifies the movie from even being a spoof."[4]

New Times Broward-Palm Beach, "It’s all very stupid, very self-conscious, and in excruciatingly poor taste (witness the breathtaking number of gay jokes proffered by the football coach, Sexina’s assistant, and Mr. West). But by the time a would-be assassin is mauled to death for no good reason by a man in a cheap bear costume, you’re convinced that filmmaker Erik Sharkey is nuts enough to try anything. That’s worth a lot."[3]

References

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