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Inside
Deep
Throat Documentary
Universal
Studios to distribute Deep Throat
"Inside Deep Throat" is a documentary that premiered this month
at the Sundance Film Festival. It examines the legacy of the 1972
flick, a forerunner of today's hardcore adult-entertainment industry
and a touchstone for obscenity laws.
"Deep Throat" was shot for $25,000 in just six days. Its male
star was a film-crew member shoved in front of the camera as a
last-minute replacement. Its director readily conceded it was
not even a good movie. Yet it was a cultural phenomenon whose
theatrical grosses are estimated at $600 million, and it became
an emblem of decadence for anti-pornography crusaders and the
namesake for an informer who helped bring down a president.
"Inside Deep Throat" - produced by Brian Grazer, whose films include
"Apollo 13" and "A Beautiful Mind" - opens theatrically in New
York City, Los Angeles, San Francisco, Boston and five other cities
Feb. 11. Grazer had been contemplating a film about "Deep Throat"
star Linda Lovelace, who died in a 2002 car crash, but found the
focus too narrow. "I was less interested in the story of Linda
Lovelace and more on the movie's effect on popular culture," Grazer
said.
Porn
movies previously had been made under the thin guise of sober
sex-education films, but "Deep Throat" had an irreverent attitude.
Co-star Harry Reems, the lighting director on the film who stepped
in after the original male lead did not work out, played a doctor
helping a patient played by Lovelace cope with an unusual "condition"
- a sexually sensitive area at the back of her throat. "It was
the first porn film to drop any pretense that it had educational
value," said Reems, now a real-estate broker in Park City. "There
was no socially redeeming value, and so the word of mouth went
out from people who saw it saying 'This is just a comedy. It's
great. You've got to see this."
Its
director, Jerry Damiano, said he did not think "Deep Throat" was
a good movie, yet it overcame its preposterous story and cheesy
production values. After "Deep Throat" opened in Times Square,
attention from media critics and outraged conservatives turned
it into a must-see movie. Arriving amid the women's liberation
movement, "Deep Throat" was also heralded as a celebration of
female sexual fulfillment. "It was the first time respectable
middle-class women went to porn theaters," social critic Camille
Paglia says in an interview in "Inside Deep Throat."
Other
cultural commentators appearing in the documentary include Norman
Mailer, Ruth Westheimer, Gore Vidal, Erica Jong and Hugh Hefner.
Incorporating explicit oral-sex footage from the 1972 original,
"Inside Deep Throat" has drawn an NC-17 rating, prohibiting people
younger than 17 from seeing it. Showing the notorious sex act
was necessary for the documentary, said "Inside Deep Throat" directors
Fenton Bailey and Randy Barbato, the filmmakers behind such acclaimed
documentaries as "Party Monster" and "The Eyes of Tammy Faye."
"There was no way we were going to make a film called `Inside
Deep Throat' without including the act," Barbato said. "Our film
is not salacious or gratuitous. That scene needed to be in there."
The
movie was so ingrained in popular culture that "Deep Throat" became
the nickname of the source who helped Washington Post reporters
Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein investigate the Watergate scandal
that led to President Nixon's resignation. "Deep Throat" was the
object of repeated legal assaults by anti-smut forces. The most
notable case was aimed at Reems, who was convicted of obscenity
in 1976 and faced a potential five-year prison term.
Celebrities
including Jack Nicholson and Warren Beatty came to Reems' defense,
and the conviction was overturned. What happened to its supposed
$600 million in theatrical revenues is a mystery. Lovelace, Reems
and director Damiano never got any of it. Normal film-distribution
channels were closed to "Deep Throat" because of its subject matter,
so much of the distribution was handled by outfits linked to organized
crime.
Theaters
were visited daily by bagmen who collected the receipts in cash.
There was no formal accounting and everyone involved skimmed off
a piece of the action, Bailey and Barbato said. "I suppose it's
kind of Hollywood-like," Bailey said. "The money just disappears."
Buy
Deep Throat
| The
most famous of all adult movies! Linda Lovelace's classic
story of a young beautiful lady with a special problem: she
feels she should be getting more out of sex than a lot of
little tingles… and mix her together with a young kookie,
horny physician who discovers the whys and hows of getting
her bells ringing! Deep Throat is the funniest, sexually explicit
romp to ever come along in motion picture history! |
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Related
Links
Harry
Reems Revisited
Deep
Throat Documentary
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