Rent How to Have Sex (2023)

3.3 of 5 from 158 ratings
1h 27min
Rent How to Have Sex Online DVD & Blu-ray Rental
  • General info
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Synopsis:
Three British teenage girls go on a rites-of-passage holiday, drinking, clubbing and hooking up in what should be the best summer of their lives. As they dance their way across the sun-drenched streets of Malia, they find themselves navigating the complexities of sex, consent and self-discovery.
Actors:
, , , Enva Lewis, Eleni Sachini, , , Laura Ambler, , Guy Lewis, , Finlay Vane Last, , Matilda Rowe, Elizabeth Matthews, , Konstandina Rousohatzaki, , Isabelle Atkinson, Luke Boydon-Jones
Directors:
Molly Manning Walker
Producers:
Konstantinos Kontovrakis, Emily Leo, Ivana MacKinnon
Writers:
Molly Manning Walker
Others:
Isabella Odoffin
Studio:
Mubi
Genres:
Drama
BBFC:
Release Date:
12/02/2024
Run Time:
87 minutes
Languages:
English Audio Description, English Dolby Digital 2.0, English Dolby Digital 5.1
Subtitles:
English, English Hard of Hearing, Italian, Spanish, Turkish
DVD Regions:
Region 2
Formats:
Pal
Aspect Ratio:
Widescreen 1.85:1
Colour:
Colour
Bonus:
  • Q&A with Molly Manning Walker and Mia McKenna-Bruce
  • Molly Manning Walker in Conversation with Reclaim the Frame
BBFC:
Release Date:
12/02/2024
Run Time:
91 minutes
Languages:
English Audio Description, English DTS-HD Master Audio 2.0, English DTS-HD Master Audio 5.1
Subtitles:
English, English Hard of Hearing, Italian, Spanish, Turkish
Formats:
Pal
Aspect Ratio:
Widescreen 1.85:1
Colour:
Colour
BLU-RAY Regions:
B
Bonus:
  • Q&A with Molly Manning Walker and Mia McKenna-Bruce
  • Molly Manning Walker in Conversation with Reclaim the Frame

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Reviews (5) of How to Have Sex

Simply Dire - How to Have Sex review by Alphaville

Spoiler Alert
24/02/2024

Horrible title for horrible film that unaccountably has some five-star-reviews on the DVD cover. Those critics should have their licences revoked. It’s a dire tale of three obnoxious, shouty, sweary, teenage girls smoking, boozing and clubbing their way through a beach holiday in Greece. The amateur, naturalistic filming makes it seem even worse. I tried to watch it, but after 15mins couldn’t stand their company any longer. The DVD describes the film as ‘vibrant’. ‘Sad’ would be nearer the mark.

2 out of 2 members found this review helpful.

Awfulness - How to Have Sex review by PT

Spoiler Alert
17/03/2024

What an awful film, it didn't start well and continued to be awful, I couldn't care less about the main characters, there was nothing to enjoy here. A complete waste of time.

1 out of 1 members found this review helpful.

A sobering insight into the pressures facing our teenagers - How to Have Sex review by Darius

Spoiler Alert
22/04/2024

An insight into what an annual holiday in one of the most popular resorts consists of for millions of our young people. Made me less likely than ever to consider a visit to Malia or anywhere similar (not that I'm in the target age range for such resorts!). A few questions - would the airline/hotel/package company really allow three unaccompanied 16-year-olds to travel unaccompanied? Would they not require at least one of them to be over 18? And what were the parents thinking of allowing them to do this? And is alcohol really so easily available in these resorts for under-18s? The film certainly opens up debate about what constitutes consent for sex when in a semi-conscious state. Should be required viewing for kids considering such holidays - and their parents.

0 out of 0 members found this review helpful.

Critic review

How to Have Sex review by Mark McPherson - Cinema Paradiso

There’s an uncomfortable level of passivity to the topical and relatable drama of How To Have Sex. On one hand, it treats the premise of vacation-party rape with an earnest tone, hitting close to home how awkward and quietly discomforting it is to feel abused beyond your control amid a drunken celebration. On the other hand, the ultimate resolve feels less like a poignant picture on the topic and more like a Richard Linklater hang-out film, to the point it feels like rape is just a common occurrence you can’t do much about.

I don’t mean the Linklater relation so much as an insult, considering the atmosphere is the best part of this film. Teenage friends Tara (Mia McKenna-Bruce), Skye (Lara Peake), and Em (Enva Lewis) have taken off on a trip to Greece. It’s a time they used to forget about their troubles, considering ? of them don’t have a clue what they’ll do after graduating college. Tara, in particular, is a virgin who is possibly hoping to get lucky and place her bad grades behind her. There’s plenty of booze at the Malia resort on the island of Crete to forget all that. There’s enough booze to forget last night.

The partying continues for days, fulfilling the giddy desires of the teen girls wanting to have fun and hook up with some drinking dudes. With her friends encouraging her to have some fun and get laid, they push her towards Paddy. Tara, however, fancies Badger but soon realizes he might not be a good guy to have sex with, considering he engages in the resort’s highly sexual events (that being fellatio performed on him by multiple women on stage as the crowd cheers them on). Disillusioned about sex, Tara decides to accept Paddy’s sexual advances with a night of sex. Tara’s reluctant nature leads to Paddy raping her, and he becomes toxic around her, lingering like an abusive monster in the corner, unbeknownst to the partying friends.

My problem with the picture is not at all in how it frames the emotions and awkwardness of getting raped while partying with friends on vacation. There are a lot of close-ups and handheld camera moments that perfectly mimic the believable nature of cackling girls who delight in their hotel, drink all day, party all night, and scroll on their phones in the morning. The parties feel real and not like an adult’s staging of young people's antics, made clear by director Molly Manning Walker putting a lot of effort into her debut. The rape and fallout of sexual abuse behind closed doors is not treated with melodrama or theatrical terror but with a quiet sense of moody dread and embarrassment.

While the staging is great, the bigger question is what is all this staging for. There’s this lingering feeling that, with some toned-down elements, this could easily pass as an afterschool special about teenage rape. There must’ve been some fear of the film coming off this way, considering the ultimate resolve it reaches. There’s no preachy moment about how to report rape, nor is there some sobering statistic presented at the end to fulfill a public service on the subject matter. In its place, however, is an almost casual sensation that you should stick by your friends when you feel you can’t admit you were raped. A bittersweet realization washes over the film's final minutes, as though the friends are trying to place Greece behind them like a weekend in Las Vegas.

How To Have Sex mostly works at feeling like an honest portrait of teenage adolescence. Its biggest fault isn’t the writing or direction but the blunt honesty that courses through it with an uncomfortable mixing of emotions by the film’s end. It’s a cautionary tale, for sure, and one that feels genuine in its depictions. Where it goes from there, however, is a level of troubling ambiguity that feels strangely lacking, but that directionless nature is something many young people can relate to. It’s that stewing in the helplessness of being bound by the endless hunt for vice where the film will probably frustrate those trying to find meaning in a world where drunk teenage girls are easy prey for horny guys at a resort. After such an event, all you have are those who will stand by you in tough times. For some, that’ll be enough, but it’s a simplification that makes this bittersweet ending more bitter than sweet.

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