

66 minutes of 90s VR thirst where a scientist builds his dream girl and probably learns nothing.
It is a few years into the future. Technology is about to change sexuality. A brilliant scientist, played by Randy Spears, has created a computer program which manufactures holographic women who are so real that he can actually reach out and touch them. . . Soon he can experience his wildest fantasies without ever leaving the lab. The next step is a virtual reality brothel in which anyone can do anything he desires. The women are always willing, beautiful, and hot. . . When he creates the perfect woman, played by Deirdre Holland, the scientist is forced to choose between reality or a MIND TRIP into the ultimate fantasy.
Practical Effects
Gloriously cheap hologram effects that aged like dairy.
Costume
Future-fashion that screams 1992 mall-cyberpunk.
Writing
Dialogue that thinks it's profound about technology.

Director
Stuart Canterbury
Trivia, insights & behind the scenes
Rides the early-90s VR hype wave alongside The Lawnmower Man, but with infinitely less budget and more nudity. The 'holographic sex' premise would resurface in countless straight-to-video SF films of the era.
Director Stuart Canterbury spent his career in adult and softcore cinema; this represents his brief flirtation with 'mainstream' SF exploitation. The 66-minute runtime suggests either disciplined editing or a production that ran out of money.