There are bad horror films, and then there’s Love Object. A movie so tone-deaf, so painfully awkward, that it makes you long for the nuanced character development of a blow-up pool toy. Written and directed by Robert Parigi, this 2003 direct-to-video fever dream tries to explore male loneliness, sexual obsession, and the horror of objectification. What it actually delivers is 90 minutes of watching a grown man yell at a plastic doll while we, the audience, slowly question our own life choices.
Meet Kenneth: The World’s Most Boring Monster
Desmond Harrington plays Kenneth Winslow, a man so bland he makes cardboard look like Daniel Day-Lewis. He’s a technical writer—because of course he is, the only job dull enough to foreshadow his hobbies. Kenneth is quiet, awkward, and apparently allergic to eye contact with women. So naturally, he orders “Nikki,” a sex doll so “realistic” she looks like the world’s saddest mannequin from a closing Sears.
Instead of just, you know, using Nikki for her intended purpose, Kenneth decides to treat her like a real girlfriend. He talks to her, argues with her, and eventually beats her. Yes, folks, this is a film where the protagonist gaslights a lump of silicone. Hereditary this is not.
Doll Problems: When the Relationship Gets Toxic
The movie leans into the absurd idea that Kenneth feels stalked by his doll. Imagine Norman Bates if he replaced Mother with a knockoff Barbie. He spirals into paranoia, screaming at Nikki like she’s cheating on him with G.I. Joe. At one point, he even chops her into pieces. Which should’ve ended the madness—but no, that’s when things somehow get worse.
Enter Lisa: Human Woman, Unfortunately
Melissa Sagemiller plays Lisa, a temp at Kenneth’s office and, in a twist that strains credulity harder than the doll’s PVC joints, she actually shows interest in him. Their relationship is awkward, but not in the “rom-com meet-cute” way—more in the “please call HR” way. Kenneth convinces Lisa to cut her hair like Nikki and wear Nikki’s outfits, because nothing says romance like forcing your date to cosplay as your dismembered sex doll.
This is the point where the movie fully jumps the shark, lands on a jet ski, and explodes. Kenneth’s obsession with Nikki bleeds into his treatment of Lisa, and the film finally remembers it’s supposed to be horror. Except instead of scares, it’s just uncomfortable fetish cosplay and embalming fluid.
The Big Climax: “I’ll Turn You Into My Doll”
Things spiral into their inevitable dumpster fire when Kenneth kidnaps Lisa, straps her down, and begins “transforming” her into Nikki 2.0. He replaces her blood with embalming fluid, because apparently technical writing teaches you DIY mortuary science. Udo Kier shows up briefly as the landlord, because no low-budget horror is complete without Udo Kier lurking around, and gets bludgeoned for his trouble.
Lisa manages to escape, attacks Kenneth, and just when you think she’s free—surprise! The cops show up and immediately shoot her, mistaking her for the aggressor because she’s wearing Nikki’s clothes. That’s right: our final girl dies in a pair of hand-me-downs from a dead-eyed sex doll. Horror tropes officially jumped out the window and never looked back.
Epilogue: The Cycle of Stupid Continues
Kenneth, miraculously, is not charged with anything because apparently police in this universe can’t tell the difference between a serial-kidnapper creep and his gagged victim. He just orders another Nikki and flirts with a florist, implying the cycle will start all over again. Because nothing screams “sequel potential” like: Love Object 2: Latex Harder.
Performances: Acting Opposite Rubber
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Desmond Harrington as Kenneth: Manages to make sociopathy look boring. His performance is so flat you’d think he was trying to method-act as the doll.
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Melissa Sagemiller as Lisa: A trooper, honestly. She spends half the movie being gaslit and the other half being strapped down. She deserved hazard pay.
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Nikki the Doll: The most expressive actor in the movie. She never blinks, never complains, and never has to explain why she signed onto this mess.
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Udo Kier: Pops in for five minutes to remind us that he’s Udo Kier. Then promptly gets killed, because the film can’t afford to keep him longer.
Dark Humor Highlights
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Kenneth yelling at Nikki like she’s betrayed him. Imagine an Oscar-bait monologue delivered to a glorified mannequin.
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Lisa’s makeover into Nikki: the horror equivalent of Extreme Makeover: Dead-Eyed Edition.
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The police shooting Lisa in doll clothes. Because of course the cops think the woman tied up in a crate is the problem, not the sweaty creep with embalming fluid on his hands.
Themes (or Lack Thereof)
The film wants to explore themes of obsession, loneliness, and the dangers of objectifying women. Instead, it just objectifies women… by literally turning one into a doll. Subtlety is not this movie’s strong suit. It’s like the script was written by a 14-year-old who just discovered Freud and Spencer’s Gifts in the same week.
Why It Fails
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The Premise Is Too Dumb: A man falling in love with a doll could make for biting satire or surreal horror. Here it’s just awkward and vaguely sleazy.
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The Tone Is a Mess: It tries to be erotic, scary, and tragic, but ends up like a Lifetime movie that wandered into the wrong section of the video store.
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The Ending Insults Everyone: Lisa deserved better. Kenneth deserved prison. Nikki deserved recycling. Instead, we get none of the above.
Final Verdict
Love Object is a horror movie that accidentally becomes a comedy. It’s not frightening, it’s not sexy, and it’s definitely not profound. It’s the cinematic equivalent of finding your neighbor arguing with his Roomba—you’re disturbed, but mostly embarrassed for everyone involved.
Yes, it’s gross. Yes, it’s sleazy. But worst of all, it’s boring. And for a movie about embalming your girlfriend to turn her into a sex doll, that’s unforgivable.

