'How to have sex': the danger of trivializing sex

The British Molly Manning Walker debuts as a director with a film that gives a lot to think about the failure of sexual education for young people and that is also a journey not exempt from criticism about summer resorts for teenagers that only offer alcohol, drugs and sex.

In How to have sex, three English girls, minors, go on vacation to an undetermined place that could be Magaluf, Lloret de Mar, Benidorm or some Greek island. One of them is very worried because she is still a virgin. The girls make friends with the boys from the apartment next door and the protagonist thinks that she can have her first sexual relationship with one of them, but her vacation days are spent sleeping and her nights are spent drinking until she vomits.

Those long-awaited vacations are nothing more than an empty and meaningless moment and the same goes for that desired sexual experience that the protagonist wants to have no matter who, when or, above all, how. A good film that will not leave viewers indifferent.

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