Veteran porn director Stuart Canterbury delivered a high-quality Adult drama that plays like a real mainstream movie. It's not related to the famous British movie wherein its title derives, but stands as a fine throwback.
Simple story has a couple about to get married: Kaitlyn Ashley, who had many hits in 1995 including the memorable "A Clockwork Orgy", and Tom Chapman, a reliable porn actor not usually given a lead role.
Shot on studio sets it has the look of a major studio 1950s picture, and reminded me of say a Martin Ritt drama or more obviously the comedy "Bachelor Flat", both 20th Century-Fox pictures. Except of course Fox movies were in 'Scope, unlike '90s porn.
Chapman is under peer pressure from his buddies Kyle Stone and Mike Horner to have sex with one of the strippers at the bachelor party they've thrown for him in a hotel suite. In flashback we discover that Chapman proposed to Ashley on their first date (a double date with Stone and Melissa Hill in the back seat of the convertible), and are ready to marry without having any pre-marital sex (a real '50s throwback).
The coaxing works, and Chapman ends up in the sack with buxom Jordan Lee, good casting mirroring the star (Kaitlyn) he's about to marry. Not coincidentally, she's been established as the one stripper of the group (with Dallas and Stacy Nichols) who is not averse to having sex with on the job.
Flashbacks also show the buddies in action: Stone humping HIll in that convertible back seat, and Horner on his honeymoon, having sex for the first time in the airplane bathroom with lovely bride Roxanne Hall.
After Chapman's infidelity, story climaxes neatly with Kaitlyn's ex-boyfriend Tom Byron visiting her, while she's wearing her wedding dress, for one last sexual liaison before she ties the knot. Right after, Chapman visits her and Canterbury delivers a terrific ending, reminscent of the classic finish of Billy Wilder's "Some Like It Hot".
It emerges as one of the very best screenplays by "Cash Markman"/Marc Cushman, using his alternate pseudonym "Bill Dollars".