Trouble with Sex
People from different worlds meet in a Dublin pub. A lawyer and a bartender feel attracted, become lovers, but face complications as their relationship develops. Their divergent backgrounds create cha…
Trouble with Sex
People from different worlds meet in a Dublin pub. A lawyer and a bartender feel attracted, become lovers, but face complications as their relationship develops. Their divergent backgrounds create challenges on their path towards love. A sexy romantic drama in which, at the outset, the characters are leading their own lives in very different worlds, though each is beset by niggling discontentment. Michelle (Renée Weldon: IFTA Best Actress) is a fast-rising young Dublin lawyer with a smart apartment overlooking the Liffey, but she's dissatisfied with her relationship with a doctor (Declan Conlon). Conor (Aidan Gillen) is lonely and unattached, dutifully running the traditional Dublin pub owned by his hard-drinking father (Eamon Morrissey). Late one night, Michelle bursts into the bar and orders a triple vodka. The consequences are explored and developed with an honesty and credibility as these disparate characters tentatively draw closer to each other; there is a strong sexual attraction and they become lovers. But there are complications along the way and the path to love can be rocky. What's the trouble with sex? You'll see. —Anonymous
Trouble with Sex
Drama,Romance
Film Details
People from different worlds meet in a Dublin pub. A lawyer and a bartender feel attracted, become lovers, but face complications as their relationship develops. Their divergent backgrounds create challenges on their path towards love.
A sexy romantic drama in which, at the outset, the characters are leading their own lives in very different worlds, though each is beset by niggling discontentment. Michelle (Renée Weldon: IFTA Best Actress) is a fast-rising young Dublin lawyer with a smart apartment overlooking the Liffey, but she's dissatisfied with her relationship with a doctor (Declan Conlon). Conor (Aidan Gillen) is lonely and unattached, dutifully running the traditional Dublin pub owned by his hard-drinking father (Eamon Morrissey).
Late one night, Michelle bursts into the bar and orders a triple vodka. The consequences are explored and developed with an honesty and credibility as these disparate characters tentatively draw closer to each other; there is a strong sexual attraction and they become lovers. But there are complications along the way and the path to love can be rocky.
What's the trouble with sex? You'll see. —Anonymous.