Checking your brain at the door works well with this. OK, where do I start? Like most party-themed movies, "Hot Dog" is light on plot and substance Farm kid Harlen Banks, competing in his first freestyle skiing event, picks up pretty girl, does pretty girl, proves he's a great skier, gets slaked by a very well put together Shannon Tweed seeing her nude is almost enough reason to buy this thing , and ends leading his American buds against the European bad boy skiers in something called a ""Chinese Downhill" Shipped quickly! Packaged well. New new new!

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Watch the video. Title: Hot Dog The Movie Rival groups in a skiing school do battle on and off the piste. One gang are rich and serious, the other group are party animals. Three middle-aged daddies visit California to have a marvelous time at the beach. When they learn that a nice apartment and an expensive cabriolet isn't enough for them to score with the A rich father hires a tutor for his son. The son is a horny teenager and the tutor is a gorgeous blonde. Complications ensue.
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This title is currently unavailable. Learn more about Amazon Prime. Close Menu. Hot Dog The Movie 5. Some of the most exhilarating skiing sequences ever filmed highlight this vigorous comedy about a rag-tag crew of ski maniacs who are ready to race or party at the drop of a beer can. David Naughton and Shannon Tweed star.
Hot Dog…The Movie is a teen sex comedy ski film released in January The film stars Patrick Houser as Harkin Banks, a young and ambitious freestyle skier from Idaho who is determined to prove himself in a freestyle skiing competition at Squaw Valley. Along the way he teams with a pack of fun-loving incorrigibles who called themselves the "Rat Pack" whose leader, Dan O'Callahan is played by David Naughton , picks up an Austrian nemesis named Rudi John Patrick Reger , and enters a love triangle with a pair of blondes, a young woman named Sunny Tracy N. The movie ends with an extended race scene, all of the characters take part in a 'Chinese Downhill' to determine the real champion of the competition. Janet Maslin , writing in the New York Times , gave a generally positive review, describing the film as "light and less moronic than it might have been.