Terminal Justice
Starring Lorenzo Lamas as the discount John Travolta, this 1996 movie is amazing in that it predicted the Playstation VR and virtual reality video games, Drone strikes, Bitcoin or cryptocurrency (except on a credit card type object), and voice-activated ambient computers like Siri and the Amazon Echo, while still being a movie almost entirely based on 90s action cliches.
If you like cliched dialogue like "Move move move!" and "Book 'em", partners dying when they're apparently only a short time from retirement, incomprehensible technology that would never work in the real world, and a mad scientist creating sex clones for a drug dealer while a gravelly-voiced hero talks about his painful past to the beautiful woman inexplicably attracted to him, well, your ship has come in. As a bonus enjoy some Arbitrarily Round Numbers (tm by James Nguyen) in the last act and a ridiculous ending.
Warning: The film does have a few scenes with mild nudity, violence, and a sex scene that rivals The Room in making sex look undesirable.
IMDB summary:
In 2008 cybersex can only be surpassed by one thing: Cloned women, especially created for their clients. This puts Pamela Travis, a famous and much sought-after cybersex star in great danger - Dr. Vivyan, scientist and genius in the field of biotechnology wants her DNA to clone her for his many customers. Sergeant Bobby Chase is assigned to protect her, but can't prevent her from being kidnapped. In order to free Pamela, Chase has to risk his life in a deadly virtual reality game called "Hellraiser" ...
- Written by Iris Kessin