Unlike the sanitized, animated diagrams often found in modern health classes, "Seksuele Voorlichting" is famously explicit. It avoids "innocuous line drawings" in favor of real-life footage to demonstrate the physical changes of puberty.

It turns out that even in a clinical Belgian classroom, love finds a way to be awkward, sincere, and strangely cinematic.

Released in 1991, (often translated as Sexual Education or Puberty: Sexual Education for Boys and Girls ) is a Belgian documentary that remains a subject of discussion for its raw and uncompromising approach to pedagogical filmmaking. Produced by Studio Landstar Films and directed by Ronald Deronge , the video was designed as an instructional tool to guide minors through the complexities of physical and emotional development. Production and Style

Today, "Seksuele Voorlichting" serves as a reminder of how much pedagogical styles have changed. While we now rely on interactive apps and digital simulations, this 1991 production stands as a stark, uncompromising, and deeply debated milestone in the history of European sex education. Sexuele voorlichting (Video 1991)

These videos, often produced by organizations like the Flemish Government’s health services or private educational publishers, had a distinct aesthetic. They were characterized by grainy footage, synthesizer background music, and a clinical approach to the human body. The videos were often shown to mixed-gender classes, a decision that sparked debate among parents and school boards at the time.