Buy Now

Special edition DVD available now! DeepDiscounts.com - so far the cheapest price (16.97) and free US shipping GoHastings.com BarnesandNoble.com Scarecrow Video Newbury Comics Diabolikdvd.com TLAvideo.com CDuniverse.com ToetagPictures.com DVDpacific.com.

Variety Review

Graphic Sexual Horror takes a peek behind the terrifying facade of Insex.com, the most notorious of bondage websites, exploring the dark mind of its artistic creator and asking hard questions about personal responsibility. Original Insex footage, behind-the-scenes interactions, and interviews with PD, models, members, and staff reveal deep fascinations with bondage and sadomasochism that run parallel, and in fact become irreversibly entwined with the lure of money.

SEE TRAILER in HIGH-RES
SEE TRAILER 2 in HIGH RES
SEE INTERVIEWS and IMAGES in BLOG


additional VIDEOS and INTERVIEWS

New York Press Review read it here

Tags:

Graphic Sexual Horror (2009)

Directed by: Barbara Bell and Anna Lorentzon

Synapse Films

Generally, when a documentary appears on television (no matter
what the subject matter) I tend to, at the very least, give it a watch.
Real people, doing real things in this fascinating world of ours.
Scripted film can rarely touch the drama or depth of what all we living
humans do. Documentaries on adult entertainment have always appealed to
me, but they tend to be all over the place. Graphic Sexual Horror,
from producer and director's, Barbara Bell and Anna Lorentzon, is not
one of them. It's not about adult films, or even straight up
"screw-and-chew"; it's about the notorious and highly popular site
called, INSEX. INSEX is not your average site for those seeking sexual
gratification via the internet; it's a website solely committed to
outrageous bondage and sado-masochism. Many of the acts shown on INSEX
were so extreme it eventually led to their demise courtesy of The
Department of Homeland Security.

PD
(Brent Scott) runs INSEX, and he's an engaging fellow who really
doesn't come across as the stereotype of what some of us "puritans",
would assume would host an extreme bondage website. PD comes across as
more of an artist than a pornographer. His meticulous nature is evident
when watching him set-up the various shots, that are later shown on the
INSEX website. He's also incredibly articulate on camera, a former
professor at Carnegie-Mellon University, a Vietnam veteran, and most
importantly very good to the ladies he puts in vices, nipple-clamps and
submerges under-water. At one point during the documentary PD shows
genuine concern for one his models. You don't really see that in too
many documentaries that focus on adult entertainment. On the flipside,
PD, in one instance on a live-feed does cross the line with a model by
slapping her for, "copping an attitude" and trying to "gain control".
He didn't quite clear the smack with her beforehand that he'd do that.
The exchange is certainly one of the more memorable highlights of Graphic Sexual Horror.

All
INSEX models are paid very well ($4000 for each session. More if you
"play" with PD.) for what they contribute to the website, but it's
important that you make it through one of PD's painful and rigorous
sessions without saying the "safe word". PD will still pay you; even if
you do scream out the "safe word" ...but, you're not coming back for
any more lucrative sessions. The majority of the girls featured in Graphic Sexual Horror
don't say the "safe word" because the money is simply just that good,
but you do get to see a few women in the film use it. Why give in
during a session when you can essentially pay your way through college
working for P.D? These models know what they're doing, and it benefits
them…once you get past the humiliation and intense pain part. The
torture scenes in Graphic Sexual Horror, while not too bloody
or grotesque, seriously get under your skin. There is one scene in
particular that had me fall off my couch. All I can say is it involves
labia and hot pepper spray.

Synapse Films has provided some excellent supplementary material for their release of Graphic Sexual Horror.
None of which bored me in the least bit; it's STILL really juicy stuff.
The deleted scenes really don't feel like real "deleted" scenes.
"Molly's Foot Torture Fantasy" was an especially eye-popping little
nugget. Something about getting needles stabbed into the bottom of the
feet, and the fact that her toes looked like they belonged on a T-1000
made this bonus a winner among the excised material .In addition,
Co-Director, Barbara Bell sits down for an interview. Bell, talks about
how she started this collaboration with her partner, co-director,
producer and cinematographer, Anna Lorentzon. More interesting facts on
PD are exposed as well; most notable, a comparison to Kubrick is
pointed out, which seems to be a very fitting once you get to see PD in
action. We're also treated to a supplement called "More from the
Models". The jaw-dropping theatrical trailer is also featured.

Graphic Sexual Horror
is a superb journey into a world, I knew existed, but never really
explored. Sure it's "Graphic" and very "Sexual", but it's so much more.
It's beautifully shot by Lorentzon. Bell and Lorentzon also create a
wonderful pace; with its focus not solely on PD, but also with the
ladies who made these frightening set-pieces so haunting. This is truly
what brings Graphic Sexual Horror to a level above those "other" documentaries. I found out by the conclusion of Graphic Sexual Horror,
that it's not the INSEX website that's a "threat" to society, it's the
moral will being imposed by The Department of Homeland Security, saying
"it's the terrorists". Yes, in the end, INSEX lost…but they're not the
real losers. Highly Recommended.

Tags:

Bougieman review of Graphic Sexual HorrorBougieman review of Graphic Sexual Horror
Bougieman #2Bougieman #2
Bougieman #3Bougieman #3

 http://bougieman.livejournal.com/436907.html

On the first day of sales, Graphic Sexual Horror climbed to #1 of Amazon's list of independently distributed,

#12 of documentaries and #645 of movies (and there are a lot of movies out there).

Thanks for all your support!

Graphic Sexual Horror #1 of independents on AmazonGraphic Sexual Horror #1 of independents on Amazon

Tags:

GRAPHIC SEXUAL HORROR Review

by Peter Gutierrez, August 8, 2010 9:55 PM

Quite a title isn't it? After all, why
settle for graphic sex or graphic horror when you can have (enjoy?) both in one
handy package?

 

The phrase "Graphic Sexual Horror" actually
derives from the all-caps warning that would greet visitors at the threshold to
the Insex.Com Web site during its heyday roughly a decade ago. But one can't be
blamed for thinking that the title pairs well with the somewhat
sensationalistic marketing copy from releaser Synapse. No, the fact that this
is a documentary is never concealed, but that doesn't really diminish the lurid
appeal--in fact, the promise that everything is real only adds to the
titillation.

 

Of course that's the same lure of realism
that attracted some 35,000 subscribers to "PD" Brent Scott's unique BDSM online
community and interactive gallery. Shooting on stark sets sporting a
"rundown, industrial look" and featuring a grim, deadpan aesthetic
that gave some the impression that PD  "really had captured the girls," the
Insex team specialized in creative live feed sessions that allowed customers to
provide real-time input and feedback. The young models would frequently plead
for mercy from all sorts of gnarly acts of sadism (one that stays with you: red
pepper flakes applied to the genitalia), but per S/M protocol there was always
a "safe word" in reserve that they could invoke if things became too
unbearable.

 

One might expect a doc covering such
subject matter to be fairly predictable in its exploitational leanings. Yet by
showing the motivations of each model to test her own psychological/physical
limits--and PD's tendency to manipulate such motivating factors--Graphic
Sexual Horror
begins to address all sorts of intriguing and totally unexpected
questions. Is there such a thing as self-exploitation? And what's to
distinguish simple exhibitionism, and those who would leverage it for profit,
from a legitimate, artistic, and maybe spiritual exploration of the body's
limits? (I'm including "spiritual" because ecstatic states similar to those
depicted in the horror flick Martyrs are briefly, but convincingly,
touched upon.)

 

Fashioning a smart, extremely well-edited
chronicle of PD's career, directors Barbara Bell
and Anna Lorentzon
consistently
emphasize the consensual nature of Insex's activities. Sometimes this is done
via backstage footage of the shoots, sometimes through video waivers in which
the models agree to a range of torments with the same air of cheerful
professionalism a job interviewee might muster in consenting to make coffee
once in a while. This same stance of calm detachment suffuses the doc as whole,
and, again, is well at odds it with the DVD promo copy that promises "the
terrifying dark history" of Insex. Yes, PD admits that he's influenced by
serial killers and that a "sicko" could use his work as a "tutorial" for
non-consensual torture, but the doc's overall presentation of such content is
quite sober:  if you're looking for an ominous soundtrack or other devices to
pump up drama or salaciousness, you'll be disappointed. 

 

That said, parts of the film are a bit hard
to watch, but bear in mind this assessment is from a layperson's
perspective--those more familiar with the BDSM subculture might find Graphic
Sexual Horror
, if not tame, then at least closer to "standard" in terms of
imagery. The onscreen blood and raised welts that appear in the context of
breast torture, caning, and other punishments are certainly not for the
squeamish, but the filmmakers are careful to position the audience as a clinical
observer, not a "fan." In fact, the opening voice-over implicitly prompts
viewer self-reflection by referencing the culturally-derived shame that often
surfaces in response to sexuality that deviates from acceptable norms.

 

I guess I shouldn't be surprised, then,
that the parts of the doc I found most disturbing are related to sex only
tangentially. On a visceral level, the sequences where the models are submerged
in cages like amateur Houdini's with no chance of escaping are the most
harrowing--sure, the women are nude, but such scenes would also pack a punch had
they been fully clothed. On an emotional level, the creepiest thing in the film
is the subtle transformation of PD/Brent himself. He starts as a would-be
iconoclast and niche aesthete thumbing his nose at mainstream academia and
pornography... and ends up a morally-rudderless impresario wielding power over
his models for personal pleasure. But maybe the most frightening thing of all
is how the government shut down Insex by effectively applying pressure to banks
under the guise of Patriot Act security measures.

 

In any case, it's clear that this kind of
cautionary tale can be applied to a range of media-making industries and
personalities, and it's these deeper themes of the film that really impress.
Indeed, the entire subject/object, audience/participant dynamic is handled at a
very high level without becoming too dryly intellectual. For example, the
models know that they can use the safe word at any time, but they also don't
want to be seen as "wimping out" in front of a live viewership that also
happens to be their fanbase. On the other hand, the presence of that
being-streamed-to audience is the only thing that ultimately ensures their
safety--paying customers as potential criminal witnesses.

 

To their credit, the filmmakers handle such
issues with a light touch, as they do the entire "art vs. pornography" debate.
In short, there's plenty of food for thought here--one can see this title
working really well in university-level courses on media, alt-culture, and
gender/sexual politics--but Bell and Lorentzon don't try to cram a message or
ponderous "insights" down the audience's throat. As a matter of fact, Graphic
Sexual Horror
should probably be looked upon as an effective primary source
more than anything else: a tight focus is maintained on the actual models and
Insex crew speaking honestly about their experiences, while completely absent
is a series of expert talking heads holding forth on the meaning of those
experiences. In addition, the generous DVD extras that Synapse has compiled
further support the notion of this disc as an invaluable primary source. What
you'll find are solid interviews and footage that really do add to the film
itself, not just cutting room floor detritus that someone decided to sweep up
and offer because, "Hey, there's bonus nudity here!" 

 

By the same token, though, the insider
perspective (both directors have worked either with or for PD) and narrow focus
on firsthand testimony yields a vague sense of opportunities missed. I'm not
contending that any doc would benefit from an injection of high-powered
commentators, but in this case a couple of engaging outside voices providing
occasional cultural context would have been welcome. It's interesting, for
example, that the height of Insex's popularity overlaps with the rise of
bondage and fetishistic torture in U.S. horror films--just a coincidence? And
don't forget that this was also the age of the caught-on-camera sexual
humiliations at Abu Ghraib and U.S. debate over the "soft" tortures of
Guantanamo. Again, maybe these specific historical and political items aren't
that relevant to the events and ideas presented in GSH, but the fact
remains that while watching the film you'd never know that any of its
compelling themes might intersect with the wider world. Which is too bad,
because while this somewhat insular approach reflects the closed, marginalized
community that is its subject matter, this sharp and thought-provoking doc
deserves to reach an audience far wider than BDSM aficionados and those with a
passing curiosity in them.

These retailers are stocking the GSH DVD, I am told more will be added.

Most of them are taking pre-orders

DeepDiscounts.com - so far the cheapest price (16.97) and free US shipping

GoHastings.com

BarnesandNoble.com

Amazon.com -pretty much worldwide shipping

Scarecrow Video

Newbury Comics

Diabolikdvd.com

TLAvideo.com

CDuniverse.com

ToetagPictures.com

DVDpacific.com

Finally, the Graphic Sexual Horror DVD is available!

On Toetag Pictures and Amazon!

Graphic Sexual Horror DVD availabe for pre-orderGraphic Sexual Horror DVD availabe for pre-order

If you want to go with an independent company that probably won't stop
selling the dvd because it DOES contain scenes of graphic sexual
horror, try TOETAG pictures

http://www.toetagpictures.com/webstore/index.php?main_page=product_info&...

Also available at Amazon. Yes, Amazon, that stopped the digital download due to "explicit issues". Somehow the hard copy was accepted (it has not been censored, feature is same edit as the download). If you are interested, keep in mind that the download was only available for 4 days. Order your copy early. Pre-order until August 10th, which probably means no customer complaints before then.

http://www.amazon.com/Graphic-Sexual-Horror-Special-Ackworth/dp/B003PNKM...

This special edition includes: Deleted Scenes. More From The Models, Unused Interview Segments. Interview with Co-Director Barbara Bell. Theatrical Trailer.

MAILING LIST

Please subscribe:

Email
Confirm your email



Unsubscribe