The title Student Seduction is intentionally misleading. While it suggests a reciprocal affair, the narrative is actually a study of . By casting Elizabeth Berkley—then primarily known for Saved by the Bell and the controversial Showgirls —the film plays with audience expectations of her "sex symbol" status only to present her as a victim of a systemic failure to believe women in professional roles. 2. The Fragility of Professional Reputation
How the community and even colleagues begin to doubt Christie despite a lack of evidence. 3. Obsession as Retaliation Student Seduction (2003)
The school board's quickness to distance itself from Christie to avoid scandal. The title Student Seduction is intentionally misleading
Josh Gaines is portrayed not as a victim, but as a manipulative antagonist who understands how to use the legal and social systems against his target. His character serves as a warning about the lack of safeguards for teachers against malicious students. Cinematic Reception and Legacy Obsession as Retaliation The school board's quickness to
A central theme is how easily a career built on years of integrity can be dismantled by a single, unsubstantiated claim. The film highlights: