Kevin & Perry Go Large

While reading an adult magazine they bought, he and his best friend Perry decide they want to go to Ibiza to become DJs and seduce women.

However, when Kevin's parents, Ray and Sheila, see his bad school report, they forbid the trip.

Searching fruitlessly for jobs, the boys end up at a house party, where a popular girl Sharon passes out drunk next to Kevin.

Later, in the town centre, an angry Sharon confronts and humiliates Kevin about this, mockingly calling him "virgin" as a crowd watches and laughs.

Distraught, Kevin arrives home in time to sign for the delivery of Ray's new credit card.

At the bank, he accidentally foils a robbery, and the manager rewards him and Perry with money with which the boys plan to fund the trip.

They also meet famous club DJ and record producer Eyeball Paul who the boys idolise.

Later, after helping Eyeball Paul, the boys end up at the club "Amnesia" where they dance the night away—without Candice and Gemma, who were refused entry by the doorman, who holds a hand-mirror to call them ugly.

While leaving, they spot Candice and Gemma, but again their attempts to woo them end in failure, although the girls start to bond with the boys when realising they know Eyeball Paul and they may be able to get them into the clubs.

This backfires on Paul when the track becomes a club favourite and the crowd, including the girls, love the boys and their mix.

The girls become the boys' girlfriends and later, Kevin and Perry are successful DJ's, signing copies of their record in a music shop with Baz as their new manager.

The opening sequence where Kevin dreams of saving Anne Boleyn from execution was filmed at Dover Castle.

The Guardian said the film was inferior to "the wave of American gross-out comedies," but noted that "Enfield himself can raise a laugh simply by throwing his arms around and moaning—as he frequently does—'I'm not your slave!

Their foray beyond the television-skit format of Harry Enfield and Chums cheerfully enters the revolting world of Farrelly Brothers' humour.