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Pushing Porn on DVDs Movies: Adult productions are exploiting newest home
entertainment form. Interactivity intrigues Hollywood, alarms others.
By KAREN KAPLAN, Times Staff Writer
The
future of digital entertainment is unfolding inside a room at VCA Labs,
where a bank of whirring computers and video equipment is churning out
such forgettable movie titles as "Stupid Cupid" and "Carwash Angels
2." The Chatsworth company has produced
more than 135 DVD movies that let viewers decide how the plot should
twist, select a special camera angle and even interact with the on-screen
stars. It's cutting-edge work in a
cutthroat industry--one that has always pushed the boundaries of
technology, and always at a profit. It also happens to be pornographic.
"From the second the camera was
invented, someone took their clothes off in front of it," said William
Margold, a board member of the Free Speech Coalition, an advocacy group
for the adult entertainment industry. "Now they're taking their clothes
off on the Internet and on DVDs." Once
again, the world's oldest industry is shaping tomorrow's mainstream
entertainment. From the printing press to
the Internet, purveyors of adult entertainment have consistently been a
force in introducing and popularizing new
technologies. In the late 1970s, they
released movies on videotape and prompted customers across the country to
buy VCRs. In the early 1990s, they were the most enthusiastic embracers of
interactive CD-ROM technology. A few years later, they became the first
companies to make money building sites on the World Wide
Web. As the multibillion-dollar war for
the eyes and wallets of the masses shifts from computer desktops to the
wired living room, pornographers again are on the leading
edge. The industry has begun to make DVD
movies that resemble video games, allowing viewers not only to watch but
also to play. Online porn companies have rolled out services that allow
Web surfers to chat with nude dancers as they shake and shimmy on screen.
At the far bleeding edge, a handful of firms have developed devices that
can be strapped onto sensitive body parts and then hooked up to a computer
for the dubious purpose of having a virtual sexual
experience. "The technology fits our
product," said VCA Labs' DVD producer, a straightforward and serious man
who goes by the stage name Wit
Maverick.
Adult
Industry Leads in Tech
Advancements Technology offerings
from adult entertainment companies grew so plentiful at the annual
Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas that this year the porn industry
pulled out and established two shows of its own--one devoted to the
Internet, the other focusing on DVD and home
video. Nobody knows exactly how many porn
titles are among the 192 million DVDs that market researcher InfoTech
estimates were sold in the United States last year for a total of $3.7
billion. But the industry's largest mail-order and online retailer, Adult
DVD Empire, sells 30,000 DVDs at $24 to $30 apiece each month through its
Web site, said Chief Executive Jeff
Rix. The popularity of porn DVDs worries
anti-porn crusaders, who fear that anything that makes pornography more
realistic will inevitably make it more
popular. Monique Nelson, chief executive
of Enough Is Enough, a national group based in Santa Ana that crusades
against pornography on the Internet, said that children could easily be
pulled in by the interactive, game-like nature of these
DVDs. "With this being so high-tech, I'm
not quite sure how many adults will know how to do this, but I know that
kids certainly will," Nelson said. Those
who study the relationship between technology and pornography says it's no
surprise that adult entertainment companies are in the vanguard. After
all, sex sells, and the profit it generates fuels the experimentation with
technologies that mainstream Hollywood is more hesitant about
embracing. Experimenting with even the
kookiest ideas is relatively inexpensive for an outfit like VCA and its
San Fernando Valley brethren, such as Vivid Video and Wicked Pictures. No
female porn star makes close to the $20 million an actress such as Julia
Roberts commands for a film. Other production costs also are lower,
because most adult movies can be shot in one or two
days. With each company releasing a
half-dozen or more titles each month, adult filmmakers can more easily
afford to push the boundaries of technology than their counterparts in
mainstream Hollywood. Perhaps the most
compelling force linking technology and pornography is the consumer demand
for greater
privacy.
DVDs
Give Viewer More Active Role Adult
movies on VHS cassettes made it possible to "bring porn into the home,"
said Constance Penley, a professor of film and women's studies at UC Santa
Barbara who teaches a course on
pornography. "You didn't have to go out
to a theater and risk being seen," Penley said. "With regular video stores
having a section for adult work, you didn't even have to go to a porn
store. And with the Internet, you didn't even have to go to a
store." With Internet connections
available in most homes, adult entertainment creators are raising the
technology stakes by focusing on
interactivity. First they flirted with
CD-ROMs. When inserted in a personal computer, the disks could play
snippets of movies, though the picture quality often was grainy. They
could also store pictures, text and bits of interactive video.
CD-ROMs' popularity fizzled with the
advent of the World Wide Web, which offered a virtually limitless supply
of pornographic pictures in addition to video
clips. But the advent of DVD has opened a
new era with picture quality that exceeds home video. DVDs have also freed
interactive pornography from the computer, allowing viewers to watch and
play on a full-size TV screen. Hollywood
studios have released scores of films on DVD. In addition to the movie
itself, a disk may contain scenes that wound up on the cutting room floor,
interviews with the director and stars, and a behind-the-scenes look at
how the movie was made. All those
features are typically available on adult DVDs as well. The difference is
that adult films take advantage of other capabilities DVD has to offer,
including giving the viewer a more active role.
VCA's "White Lightening," for example,
tells a story through the eyes of five characters. Viewers can watch the
movie in chronological order--skipping from character to character--or see
the whole story from one character's point of
view. "Chasing Stacy," also from VCA
Labs, is a choose-your-own-adventure flick that follows Stacy the porn
star as she signs autographs, drinks coffee, works out at the gym and
takes a shower. At various points, a
small green icon appears in the corner of the screen and Stacy looks
straight at the camera. That's when viewers get the chance to ask Stacy
out on a virtual date by pressing the Enter button on the DVD remote
control. The date scenes are filmed so
that the viewer feels like he's sitting directly across a glass table from
Stacy, who provides insights into her personal life. Later, the viewer can
select whether to take Stacy back to her house, to her office, or to
another locale for a tryst. With the remote control, the details can be
chosen as the action unfolds. Sales data
confirm that the new technology is popular with consumers. Since its
release in July, VCA has sold more than 12,000 copies of the interactive
movie--the fastest any of its titles has ever reached that
mark. Though movies such as "Chasing
Stacy" may seem a bit exotic for mainstream tastes, David Crawford, DVD
production manager for Wicked Pictures in Canoga Park, believes this
interactive technology will someday be used by Hollywood--even by such
family-focused companies as Disney. "It
has a great children's application," Crawford said. "You can tell a nice
little fairy tale and have this be the frame of it. The idea is great,
whether the content is for adults or
children." Some Hollywood directors
probably will never embrace a technology that gives viewers the chance to
undo their careful storytelling. But others will certainly find
interactivity a compelling way to grab fickle eyeballs and keep them
engaged. ABC has experimented with
Enhanced TV links to its Web sites so that sports fans can look up
statistics while watching "Monday Night Football." Last week, the
newsmagazine "Dateline NBC" allowed viewers to determine the course of a
murder investigation by voting on the
Web. As more digital set-top boxes are
deployed in homes with cable and satellite television, mainstream
Hollywood will surely be looking for ways to introduce interactivity, and
they may find themselves following in the porn industry's
footsteps. The current adult
entertainment offerings are still technologically crude and, compared with
real life or even some advanced computer games, are interactive only in
the most basic sense of the word. Perhaps
the clunkiest incarnation of the technology is the so-called virtual sex
machine, a massage mechanism that attaches to the user's body and then is
plugged into a PC. The inventor, Eric
White, says the massage mechanism simulates the sensation of a sex act as
it occurs simultaneously on the computer screen. He says he has sold more
than 750 of his $369 machines since they went on the market in
June. For more than a year, engineers at
Vivid Video in Van Nuys worked on a neoprene cat suit adorned with phone
wires and electrodes. The company eventually decided to abandon the
project as unworkable.
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