PORN MOVIES WITH A CRITICAL EYE

Porn Movies With a Critical Eye

Porn Movies With a Critical Eye

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Whether you love it or hate it, pornography is big business. That’s why movies that take a critical eye to the world of filming sexually explicit material are bound to be interesting—and often quite disturbing. Depending on the filmmaker, that might mean focusing on the story of a character who works within the industry, or it could be a more glancing look at some scenes that are a part of the plot. These movies straddle the line between erotic and non-erotic, with some snazzy sex scenes and nudity but also interesting musings on how the genre is changing with the times.

While the sexy sex scenes in this film are certainly titillating, the real power lies in the exploration of female pleasure and authentic lust. Director Petra Joy uses sexy, sensually-shot vignettes paired with erotic music to create an erotic visual poem that all art babes will die for.

The first full-length porn movie to be made in black and white, this film proves that sexy doesn’t always have to be sexy. A semi-underground industry emerged in the late 1960s when nude actresses answered New York City newspaper ads for ‘models’ to be featured in low-budget pornographic films meant for peep booths and adult video stores. This wry, funny satire of the film business and the people who make it thrives on its ensemble cast led by Joseph Gordon-Levitt as a lovable loser who enlists the help of his small town neighbors to make a porno.

What can you do when you’re Porn Movie an aspiring filmmaker and a porn star moves in next door? Why, you make a film about it of course. This cult classic from writer/director/star/producer Jill Bauer and producer Ronna Gradus takes the campiness of 1980’s porn blockbusters like Caligula to an erotic level, with lots of casual sex and nakedness in between.

Two straight dudes (Mark Duplass and Joshua Leonard) get boozed up and challenge each other to make a gay porn movie as an experiment in male friendship. While this sounds like the set-up for a raunchy Judd Apatow flick, Lynn Shelton’s tender and humorous portrait of male insecurity and sexual timidity is more nuanced and thoughtful than that.

Though it is a bit of a slow starter, this documentary by filmmakers Jill Bauer and Ronna Gradus about the life of young amateur porn performers is both frank and unsettling. Their raw footage reveals the real-life perils and risks of working in the business, as well as its exploitative effects on those who are part of it. The film’s success prompted them to return for a follow-up Netflix series that delves into other aspects of the industry they couldn’t cover in this film.

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