In the dingy back alley of ’90s straight-to-video cinema—where the liquor’s watered down, the neon flickers like it’s got the shakes, and every script is written in lipstick on a motel mirror—you’ll find Lap Dancing (1995) sprawled out like a broken promise in six-inch heels. This isn’t a film so much as it is a stained cocktail napkin of an idea, passed off as drama and soaked in the cheap perfume of softcore ambition.
It sells itself like it’s got something to say about shattered dreams and the blood-price of ambition, but really it just unzips its fly, flashes a few skin-deep ideas, and slinks back into the shadows muttering something about empowerment. It wants to be Showgirls but ends up feeling like a rerun of Red Shoe Diaries shot on a camcorder by a guy who thinks character development means a tear during a strip tease.
Lap Dancing doesn’t dance. It staggers. And yet—like finding a rose in a gutter—there’s Lorissa McComas, the only damn reason to watch this smoke-and-mirrors mess all the way through.

