Tag Archive: Pornography


PLEASURE directed by Ninja Thyberg (Sweden, 2021)

When Bella Cherry (not her real name) arrives in America from Sweden, the customs officer asks if her visit is for business or pleasure. Bella replies “Pleasure” with a wry smile. After watching this movie, I’d say she gave the wrong answer.  Having lots of sex would normally count as a pleasurable activity but when this is done for money in a mechanical, ritualistic manner then, just as in prostitution,  it falls squarely into the category of business.

It is soon clear that Thyberg’s objective is not to make a feminist movie or to criticise pornography.  We see a male dominated world in which the women consent to be exploited and abused knowing full well the implications and content of the encounters beforehand.  

Continue reading

One the earliest known page 3 girls

One the earliest known page 3 girls

British PM, David Cameron, has refused to back a ban on the publication of  photos of Page 3 topless models in The Sun tabloid ‘newspaper’. He argues that to do so would be to an invasion of consumers’ right to personal choice.

By implication, he sees no fundamental harm in pictures of semi naked women being used to sell papers.

It’s interesting, and ironic, that this story has broken at the same time as his party announce legislation to censor online pornography.

I see these two issues as intrinsically connected in a way that Cameron and the Conservative Party do not.

Allow me to explain.

There is nothing illegal in what The Sun chooses to publish and, since it is the UK’s top-selling newspaper, it is arguable what they print is wholly in tune with what the great British public wants.

Governments cannot legislate against bad taste, nor should they attempt to do so. Continue reading

For men of my generation sex education was as lacking as reliable information about dental hygiene. If ever I see anyone in their 50s with bad teeth I always suspect they had a tormented adolescence like me.

Studying reproductive organs in biology textbooks is no preparation for pressing questions about sexual congress.

While watching an old movie where a man and women were kissing and whispering sweet nothings to each other, my Dad told me this was called ‘smooching‘ but didn’t expand on what it signified. If there were any steamier scenes or nudity on TV my mother would hastily switch channels commenting “this is a load of rubbish”.

The consequence of this was that I reached puberty fascinated by, yet ignorant of, the intricacies of the female anatomy.

Feeling a girl’s erect nipples press against my back in a crowded school tuck shop was as exciting as my sex life got. My porn consisted of ogling the models in the lingerie section of my mother’s mail order shopping catalogues. Continue reading

READ BANNED BOOKS

I am only just in time to post during Banned Books Week (which ends today) but I applaud this initiative against blinkered individuals and groups who have sought and still seek to dictate what people should be allowed to read.

Recent challenges to popular teen fiction titles like the Hunger Games trilogy and the Twilight saga (for being sexually explicit and unsuited to the age group) indicate that this battle against bigotry and narrow-minded thinking is still raging.

What we are talking about here has nothing to do with simply outlawing books that are poorly written or manipulative (although they may include such titles).

According to the Office for Intellectual Freedom, at least 46 of the Radcliffe Publishing Course Top 100 Novels of the 20th Century have been the target of ban attempts.

What often makes a book controversial is the fact that it challenges perceived norms and conventions. This is what makes them so valuable and so vulnerable.

There is no place for such censorship in any society that claims to stand for freedom of speech and to value democracy.

One of the key principles here can be summed up by the quote widely attributed to Voltaire: `I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it”.

J.G. Ballard’s ‘Crash’ is one of those rare novels that changes the way you see the world. Not only is it full of majestic writing  (“traffic moved like blood in a dying artery“), it is also able to enter the mindset of his eponymous narrator who at one point reflects that “the entire zone which defined the landscape of my life was now bounded by a continuous artificial horizon”.

Ballard wrote in his 1995 introduction to the novel that “I would like to think that ‘Crash’ is the first pornographic novel based on technology”.  This is a smart sound bite but to use the word ‘pornographic’ is also misleading . Although Ballard demonstrates an intimate knowledge of the dynamics (the ins and outs!) of porn, his  descriptions are too detached and clinical to be sexy. They are consistent with his philosophy that “novelists should be like scientists, dissecting the cadaver”.

Ballard regarded the automobile as the key symbol of the 20th century; an integral part of our  “metallized landscape” .  The identification of automobile as phallic symbol has become such a familiar cliché that this it is no longer questioned. Scantily clad models pose across the bodies of cars at motor shows while advertisers and car designers routinely direct and respond to sexual fantasies. This  process is brilliantly described by Ballard as the “subordination of function to gesture”.

The commonplace association of automobiles with sex and power is the basis for Ballard’s sinister and deliberately provocative vision. He examines the symbolic marriage of man and machine through the sustained metaphor of the car-crash as a sexually transforming event. So of the severely crippled Gabrielle, he writes: “The crushed body of the sports car had turned her into a creature of free and perverse sexuality, releasing within its twisted bulkheads and leaking engine coolant all the deviant possibilities of her sex”ù

The novel’s anti-hero is Robert Vaughan, a one time computer specialist turned TV scientist with  “an aggressive lecture-theatre manner” whose charisma stems from his unswerving obsessions and insatiable sexual gymnastics.  Here are two descriptions of the sex act he engages in:

“Vaughan gripped the nipple between thumb and forefinger, extending it forward in a peculiar manual hold, as if fitting together a piece of unusual laboratory equipment”

Vaughan drew his fingers from the girl’s vulva and anus, rotated his hips and inserted his penis into her vagina”.

The same dispassionate voice is used in describing death. For instance, when the first person narrator (James Ballard)  observes a fatally injured woman lying in a hospital bed he notes:

“I visualized the graphs that recorded the falling temperatures of her rectum and vagina, the steepening gradients of nerve function, the last curtains of her dying brain”

It is this tone that makes the novel as disturbing as it was when it was written in 1973. There is no moral stance to reassure the reader that sanity or convention will prevail. The narrator makes no judgement on the extreme and increasingly deranged actions of the characters.

Nicolas Roeg was once in the frame to make the movie version. This would have been a logical choice because in films like ‘Don’t Look Now’ and ‘Bad Timing’, Roeg makes a close link between violence and desire. However, I’m sure that he would have made a more heavily stylised version of the book and steered away from its harder imagery.

David Cronenberg makes no such concessions to refined taste and, on the contrary, positively revels in the sick, depraved lives of Ballard’s creations.  The movie won the jury prize at Cannes under the specially invented category of “originality, audacity and daring”.

Cronenberg –  a self-confessed “card-carrying existentialist” understands the twisted logic of  Ballard so is able to present visual images of  what the ‘Sage of Shepperton calls “the deviant technology of the car-crash”. He deliberately avoids using the conventional Hollywood action formula when shooting the car-crashes; there are no slow motion sequences or multiple camera angles. Similarly, the sex is frequent, sometimes erotic, but not presented just for the audience’s titillation.

In Cronenberg’s movies, he has always identified with, and celebrated, those who exist on the margins of conventional social structures. He argues persuasively that what society regards as normal is actually an effort of human will and not a reflection of natural behaviour.

‘Crash’ is a book written ahead of its time and the movie version is equally controversial because it doesn’t try to sanitize or soften Ballard’s dark vision. In the novel, Vaughan dreams of dying in a blaze of blood and glory with actress Elizabeth Taylor. In the movie we see spectators enjoying a re-enactment of the “flamboyant public death” of James Dean.  Today, there remains a morbid fascination for celebrity deaths, epitomised  in the public clamour for details surrounding the last fatal journey of Lady Diana.

Ballard’s graphic descriptions still shock through the uncompromising extremity of his ideas and the power of his writing. His words accurately mirror the violence and sexually explicit imagery that we take for granted in our daily lives. Today, we have web sites like car accidents.com and images of ‘real life’ accidents on TV that blur the line between entertainment and information.  In Ballardian technology,  fact and fiction, like reason and nightmare, are indistinguishable. As he wrote:  “The fiction is already there. The writer’s task is to invent the reality”.