

Two best friends, one messy journey, zero subtlety — will they finally hook up or what?
Forty-one year old Randy Spears (looking exactly like 41-year-old Randy Spears) begins Wicked’s “Best Friends” as a college student preparing to leave for med school. April Flowers, his much younger-looking best friend, is worried that they may never see each other again. Written by Melissa Monet, this is the story, told vignette-style, of the ups and downs of their relationship over a period of several years, during which Randy gets married, has a couple of kids, and gets divorced, and April experiments with lesbian love, takes up with kinky Eric Masterson, and dumps him when she catches him screwing around with the couple next door. It’s the story of two best friends who go their separate ways only to wind up together again, unattached, and mature enough to finally admit their love for one another.
Production
Aggressive commitment to the 'college student' casting choice.
Writing
Melissa Monet's vignette structure keeps you guessing which era you're in.

Director
Jim Enright
Trivia, insights & behind the scenes
Wicked Pictures' early 2000s output bridged the gap between adult features and mainstream romance tropes, with Melissa Monet's scripts often prioritizing emotional beats over explicit content.
Jim Enright directed over 200 adult features but rarely acted; his cameo here as 'Jim' is a blink-and-miss-it vanity moment.