The film was titled
Sunnyvale during its
film festival run and was the winner of the
William Shatner Golden Groundhog Award for 'Best Underground Movie' of 2005. The award was described by critic Joshua Taylor as "maybe... just a veiled promotional tool for William Shatner's new DVD of the month club."
SFist wrote that "...writer/director James Ricardo also starred in the movie and he was definitely the weakest of the actors. So it was hard to tell if it was just wooden acting that make Ricardo, the character, so passive or if he was intended to be. Talking to other filmgoers about it afterward, we all seemed confused. No one really disliked it but everyone seemed unsure if they liked it really, or if they just wanted to like it."
DVD Talk offered that the film is "a lowbrow talking head comedy with a wittier than average script," and for "a first time director, Ricardo could have done much worse. His script is good, and he gets good performances from his three lead actresses." In making comparisons between Ricardo and directors such as
Woody Allen and
Clint Eastwood who have acted in films they were also directing, they made note that Ricardo's own lead performance as a deadpan Opie was serviceable, but had a stiffness that a director not himself in front of the camera might have caught. They summarized by stating the film "is a quirky romantic comedy about sex that has no sex and stars a cast of unknowns. But if you can get past that, you should be entertained."
DVD Verdict noted that the title and packaging led to expectations of a cheapo sex comedy featuring "clichéd plot developments and plenty of gratuitous nudity," but that the film "feels more like a stage adaptation than anything else", with sexual content only alluded to by dialogue scenes serving "as the 'before' and 'after' for dozens of brief but apparently successful sexual encounters". They commented that the "editing is tight, the dialogue is occasionally quite amusing, and the film rarely becomes terribly boring", noting "many individual attributes of merit here, so it's a little disappointing that the film as a whole doesn't quite gel". They commented that the character of Opie as written by Ricardo had much potential, but that as played by the director just was not interesting. They noted a paradox in that "Ricardo's performance suggests that he knows his writing is good," in that he "delivers the dialogue with a sort of smug assurance that feels more like a tell than like a natural extension of the character's personality". They concluded that the film "wins points for breaking some genre conventions" and that Ricardo and some of the other cast have potential for future films. ==References==