Some movies are forgotten because they’re overlooked. Others are forgotten because they’re bad. And then there’s Blind Date (also marketed with the much spicier, much less accurate title Deadly Seduction), which is forgotten because time itself rejected it, like an organ transplant gone wrong. Directed by Nico Mastorakis, the legendary B-movie auteur who never met a cheap idea he couldn’t stretch into 90 minutes, this film is one long exercise in proving that just because you can make a movie doesn’t mean you should.
The Premise: You Can’t Un-See It
Our “hero,” Jonathan Ratcliff (Joseph Bottoms—yes, that’s his real name, not a rejected Austin Powers gag), suddenly goes blind. Doctors, apparently having watched one too many episodes of The Six Million Dollar Man, fit him with a magical electronic implant that lets him see digital outlines and bright neon squiggles. Imagine an Atari 2600 video game glued to your retinas and you’ve got the idea.
Naturally, the first thing Jonathan does with his new cyber-vision isn’t marvel at technology or rebuild his life. No, he witnesses a murder. Because in Mastorakis World™, science always leads directly to crime. Now it’s up to him, his malfunctioning Nintendo-eyeballs, and a cast of women who deserved much better careers, to stop a serial killer who slashes through the film like a bored extra with a timecard to punch.
Acting: The Real Blind Spot
Joseph Bottoms has the range of a damp sponge, and that’s on his best days. As Jonathan, he’s meant to be vulnerable yet determined, but mostly he just looks constipated and confused, which admittedly is the natural reaction to being in this movie.
Kirstie Alley, pre-Cheers fame, plays Claire Simpson. She seems like she’s acting in a completely different movie—a Lifetime melodrama where she stares meaningfully into the middle distance, praying for a better script.
Lana Clarkson is on hand as Rachel, wearing outfits designed more by glue guns than by actual fabric. She doesn’t so much act as pose, but honestly, who could blame her? Mastorakis never wanted depth; he wanted distraction.
And then there’s Marina Sirtis, before Star Trek: The Next Generation. Here she plays “Hooker,” which is the kind of role you take when your agent is either drunk, asleep, or hates you. To her credit, she does what she can with a part that seems to exist only so someone in the audience can point at the screen and yell, “Hey, that’s Counselor Troi!”
Valeria Golino pops up as “Girl in Bikini.” Yes, really. Valeria Golino—the same actress who would later star in Rain Man and Hot Shots!—is relegated here to bikini filler, proving that even talented actresses sometimes have to crawl through cinematic sewage before getting a shot at sunlight.
The Killer: Or, How to Murder Tension
The serial killer is, in theory, the engine of suspense. In practice, he’s about as menacing as a guy who steals your parking spot at the mall. He kills people, sure, but the murders are so lazily staged that you half expect him to check his watch mid-stabbing.
There’s no flair, no creativity, no tension—just a generic psycho who looks like he wandered in from another low-budget European thriller and decided to hang around for craft services. Even the kills are edited with all the urgency of a PowerPoint transition.
Mastorakis: The Michelangelo of Mediocrity
Let’s talk about Nico Mastorakis. This is a man who has made a career out of cinematic junk food, except instead of chips, it’s the stale, bottom-shelf brand where you’re not sure if the cheese dust is edible.
With Blind Date, Mastorakis proves he can’t direct suspense, can’t handle eroticism, and has no idea how technology works. The “cyber-vision” sequences look like rejected Tron footage, with Jonathan stumbling through scenes like a man trying to read street signs during a laser light show.
And yet, there’s something almost admirable about Mastorakis’ confidence. He directs with the self-assurance of someone convinced they’re making Vertigo, while in reality they’re shooting the kind of film that goes straight to VHS and immediately melts in the VCR.
Pacing: Death by Boredom
Thrillers are supposed to be tense. They’re supposed to have momentum, paranoia, mystery. Blind Date has none of these things. Instead, it lurches from scene to scene like a drunk stumbling home, falling into gutters and occasionally screaming.
You’d think with all the murders, nudity, and neon cyber-vision, the film would at least be entertaining in a trashy way. But no—every scene is so drawn out, so poorly paced, that watching it feels like punishment. Even the killer seems bored, dispatching victims like he’s on the clock and his shift ends at 5.
Erotic Thriller? More Like Erotic Tragedy
The film is marketed as an erotic thriller. Let’s break that down:
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Erotic? Unless you find dimly lit soft-focus shots of disinterested actors awkwardly pawing each other erotic, the answer is no. The sex scenes are about as arousing as a tax seminar.
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Thriller? Only if your definition of “thriller” is “watching paint dry while someone occasionally jingles keys in the background.”
What you actually get is a grimy blend of exploitation and boredom. A Skinemax movie without the skin, and a thriller without the thrills.
The Music: Synth Crimes Against Humanity
The soundtrack deserves its own mention. It’s all synth, all the time. Now, synth can be great—Carpenter proved that—but here it’s just random beeps and bloops, like a Casio keyboard being tortured by a caffeinated teenager.
Every time Jonathan “sees” through his implant, the score goes wild with electronic nonsense, making the scenes less suspenseful and more like a broken arcade cabinet trying to eat your quarters.
The Legacy: Blind Leading the Blind
Blind Date has no legacy, and for good reason. Nobody references it, nobody revisits it, and nobody outside of hardcore cult-film masochists even remembers it exists. The most interesting thing about it is the cast list, where you see familiar names like Kirstie Alley, Marina Sirtis, and Valeria Golino and think, “Wait, what? They were in this? Why?”
It’s the cinematic equivalent of finding an embarrassing yearbook photo of a celebrity. They’d rather you didn’t bring it up.
Final Verdict: A Date You Should Ghost
At the end of the day, Blind Date isn’t just bad—it’s aggressively bad. It’s boring, ugly, and confused, a movie that tries to be Hitchcock, fails, then tries to be Basic Instinct before Basic Instinct existed, and fails even harder.
If you want a laugh, you might enjoy the absurdity of the cyber-vision sequences or the sheer awkwardness of the so-called erotic moments. Otherwise, it’s 90 minutes of your life you’ll never get back, and no experimental implant will ever restore that lost time.
Grade: F
The only thing deadly here is the boredom.



