Archive for the 'romance' Category

MATT AND KHYM gets a great review from Good For Her!

Wednesday, February 21st, 2007

The Toronto sex store Good For Her will forever have a warm place in our hearts here at Comstock Films because Good For Her was the very first place that bought our first film, MARIE AND JACK: A HARDCORE LOVE STORY. We sent them a screener, they watched it, and then they placed an order. After nearly a year of hearing other people tell us why MARIE AND JACK was great, but not salable, we were thrilled!

Now we’re thrilled all over again with Good For Her’s fantasitic review of our latest, MATT AND KHYM: BETTER THAN EVER:

This installment from award-winning documentary-style filmmaker Tony Comstock is a revelatory look inside the intensely intimate and incredibly sexual relationship of two young, attractive people.

Matt & Khym – a loving married couple in their thirties – take us along on their incredible journey revealing the history of their partnership and the secrets of their romantic bliss.

During the interview, as they speak about their enduring attraction, the heat building between them is palpable and they have trouble keeping their hands off each other. The interspersed action shots of them together only add to the delicious tension.

The film ends with a breathtaking sex scene so honest and so fierce that it puts much of what’s on offer in the modern industry to shame.

Think there’s nothing new in the world of porn? Think again. Matt & Khym sets a new standard for documentary sex films.

If you’re up North and want to do your shopping in-country, nothing would make us happier than if bought our films from Good For Her. And if you’re in Toronto, Good For Her offers our titles for rent as well!

“It’s a movie about passion and romance…”

Thursday, January 18th, 2007

One of AdultDVDTalk.com’s most prolific and respected reviewers, Astroknight, has just posted the first review for MATT AND KHYM: BETTER THAN EVER. Here’s my favorite part of his very nice review:

“It takes a wonderful look at not just the sexuality between a couple, but how it got to be there. That thought of sex as a journey doesn’t seem to come up for too many directors, but at the same time is something that almost any couple who’s been together for any length of time realizes. It’s a movie about passion and romance not only existing together, but also feeding off each other to draw two people even closer. It’s a beautiful thought, and one that had a smile on my face within the first few minutes of the movie.”

The thing I love about reading Astroknight’s reviews of our films is that they come from someone who is truly passionate porn. Astro’s written about 2000 (yes, 2000) reviews for ADT, covering nearly the entire porn spectrum. He’s both a porn conesuer and a porn omniover. He’s as likely to pass out praise (or scorn) to a gonzo anal raunch fest as to a couples feature.

When Astro gives us praise, it gives me a feeling of extra satisfaction. A lot of the people who enjoy our films don’t really like porn, but I also like knowing that Astro thinks what we do is pretty nifty too. I like the idea that there are straight people like our gay film, gay people like our straight films, and people like Astro who can dig the Comstock vibe too.

An extremely nice podcast review of MATT AND KHYM:BETTER THAN EVER from Video Extreme!

Friday, January 5th, 2007

“Sex and intimacy is something you should cherish…” Khym, from MATT AND KHYM: BETTER THAN EVER

That’s a sound-bite from our film that begins this very nice podcast review of MATT AND KHYM: BETTER THAN EVER from Professor P and Sweet Tits of the Bellingham WA video store Video Extreme. They say MATT AND KHYM is “the perfect couples film, or anyone else tired of cookie-cutter porn.” Yay!

Also on the podcast is a review of Jack the Zipper’s BLACK LIGHT BEAUTIES. The review for that comes first. The review for MATT AND KHYM is about half way into the show. I got a nice laugh hearing Sweet Tits recounting my cold call!
(Press “play” to hear it.)


Here’s a link to the rest of Professor P’s Panorama Podcasts. Thanks Professor P, Sweet Tits, and Video Extreme!

Fun with the Adwords ‘Romantic Erotica’ and ‘Erotic Romance’

Thursday, January 4th, 2007

Okay, so I can’t get ‘romantica’, so I thought I’d try ‘romantic erotica’ and ‘erotic romance.’ Here’s what the dictionary says about these words:

Erotic: 1: of, relating to, or tending to arouse sexual love or desire
2: strongly marked or affected by sexual desire

Romance 1: A feeling of excitement or mystery associated with love.
2: Love, especially when sentiment or idealized.

Sounds like a good match for Comstock Films, no? Looks pretty Relevent right? Not according to the Googlebot:

This keyword has a low Quality Score, so the minimum bid exceeds your current maximum cost-per-click (CPC).

What does this mean?
Each keyword is given a Quality Score based on the relevance of your keyword, ad text, and landing page. If your keyword quality is low, the minimum CPC bid required to show your ad for that keyword will be high. Conversely, high quality keywords have lower minimum CPC bids.

If the minimum CPC bid for a keyword is greater than your maximum CPC bid, your keyword becomes inactive and your ads stop showing for that term. Learn more about monitoring your account performance.

Here’s a site that seems to have a better Quality Score for ‘erotic romance’ than Comstock Films. The Googlebot does think we’d be a good match for ‘cum guzzling sluts.’ Says we’d get a low CPC on that one. Thanks, but we’ll pass.

You know what I think the problem is? I think the Googlebot needs to get laid!

Back to the drawing board…

P.S. It looks like Google is serving anti-porn advertisements onto Violet Blue’s San Francisco Chronical Column. And here’s another site advertising using the Adword keyword ‘erotic romance’ that apparently has a higher Quality Score than Comstock Films. I think the Googlebot is conflicted about sex!

From Russia with Love

Tuesday, December 19th, 2006

Just in case you were wondering how to say “Tony Comstock” in Russian. With the help of google’s translation tools:

“[The film] is able to convey a strong erotizm everyday life, which does not end when the cameras are off. This is not a rogue proximity, there is an attempt to portray a pornozvezda Jenna Jameson. Sex is portrayed as a natural element Romantic proximity, and charges of spectators positive sense, Aesthetics which disappeared from pornographic films in the late 1970s and early 1980s.”

Eddy loves DAMON AND HUNTER!

Monday, December 11th, 2006

Freddy and Eddy have given warm reviews to our previous efforts (apparently their screening ofXANA AND DAX got Eddie so wound up it led to their first adventure with fisting!)

But when I sent a copy of DAMON AND HUNTER: DOING IT TOGETHER over to them I already knew that hot man on man action really isn’t Freddy’s thing. The question was, “What will Eddie think?”

Well the verdit is in and the apparently Eddy liked it a lot! Says Eddy:

Damon and Hunter is Comstock Films’ third release. Damon Demarco and Hunter James are a young gay couple who are definitely smitten with each other as they re-tell their story about how they first met and how their relationship developed into such a passionate love. Throughout the film, as Damon and Hunter discuss how they became lovers there are vignettes of them making love. As you continue to watch how they explain their roles within their relationship, you learn how a gay relationship differs from the average hetero relationship. I found that other than pleasuring each other, they took the time to really communicate what they each individually wanted the other partner to do. The openness really impressed me and they truly made love with such tenderness.

Damon and Hunter is so far removed from what the general public views as “gay porn”. I liken a description of Damon and Hunter more like a romance story between two lovers who look at life together with such passion. Their answer to the posed question of “why do you suppose some women don’t like giving oral sex to heterosexual men?” And the look of confusion as they look into the camera with such honesty “How can they not?!” lends me to believe they are in their own bubble, but what a bubble it is!

And what does Freddy have to say?

Eddy was turned on more by this than 99% of straight porn. I’m not really into gay adult anything, so it’s hard for me to render a judgment on something in which I couldn’t watch the actual sex. The interviews were great, and the couple shows genuine passion and love for one another. And I can’t argue that the film made my wife EXTREMELY horny, so what’s not to like. I am puzzled by the gaining popularity of females watching gay adult (some girlfriends of my wife actually sit around and watch it together drinking wine and chatting).

Freddy might be puzzled, but I’m not. I still remember the first time I saw one of those “lesbian” layouts in Penthouse Magazine, and I remember it really turned my crank! So is it any surprise that women might get hot and bothered seeing a couple of gorgeous men go at it? I don’t think so.

(Actually my wife Peggy is one of those women who sits around with her friends and watches gay porn; only it’s not wine, it’s cheesecake and scotch.)

MATT and KHYM: Closer Than Ever

Wednesday, November 8th, 2006

MATT AND KHYM has moved from the editing suite to the DVD authoring suite, and that means that there are only a few days left to get this wonderful film at the discount pre-order price of $12.95. MATT AND KHYM is another shot-on-film, anamorphic wide-screen release; you won’t find a sexually explicit film that’s more beautifully rendered.

But what makes this film truly special are Matt and Khym, and their story of a love affair that stretches back to the 1980s, when he was 21 and she was just 18 and still a virgin! Never before have we had a chance to visit with a couple who’ve shared so many years with each other before they shared themselves with us, and the result is a “hardcore love story” of deep resonance. If you’re a romantic old fool like me, or even a romantic young fool, you’re going to love MATT AND KHYM!

Meanwhile, here’s a lovely little peek at this lovely little film. Enjoy!


Blowfish Gets It

Tuesday, May 23rd, 2006

Somewhere back in the very early days of the World Wide Web I stumbled across Blowfish.com, and as it turned out, it changed my life. Blowfish.com is where I discovered sex wasn’t stupid or gross, or rather it’s where I discovered that the sex business doesn’t have to be stupid or gross.

Blowfish is where I saw, and then purchase my first silicone dildo. Blowfish is where I first saw the work of Julian Snelling. Blowfish is where I found Bodywise lubes (the only lube other than Eros Bodyglide that Peggy and I use). And Blowfish is where I started to wonder “Why aren’t there sex films as nice as all these other very nice things they sell? Why aren’t there sex films that made me feel as happy and sexy as these dildos and buttplugs and lubes?”

Not too long after that, Peggy and began shooting the studies that became the foundation for Comstock Films, and some five or six years later, Blowfish became the first American retailer to stock Marie and Jack: A Hardcore Love Story. Now they’ve added Damon and Hunter to their selection of video offering, and we couldn’t be happier with what they have to say about the film:

“We like Comstock films because they are documentaries about real couples who really like each other and really like sex. And we get to see the couples not only having sex, but talking about sex. They also talk about love, romance, how they met, and all sorts of other very personal, intimate things. It’s regular porn, and communication porn brought together.

“Damon and Hunter: Doing it Together follows in the real life couples tradition of other Comstock films with the added bonus of being shot on film so it looks stunning. Really. If there weren’t a lot of hard core fucking in it I’d swear it wasn’t a porn film. Both boys are totally cute and sexy and clearly excited about fucking each other. They really get into talking about their relationship and their enthusiasm about being boyfriends is a little intoxicating. After you watch this movie you may just want to run right out and fall in love with your own cute gay boy.

“Consider yourself warned. The first half of the film cuts back and forth between long scenes of Damon and Hunter talking about their lives and quick Nouvelle Vague style jump cuts of them having sex. It’s sort of like a Godard film with a hard on. The second half is the hottest boy on boy sex you’ll ever see. They just seem like real people and not porn stars, because of course they are real people. But just for the record, they are real people who have great sex. These two boys are so yummy they pretty much transcend gender and sexual orientation. We’re pretty sure they will appeal to just about anyone.”

Blowfish gets it. Blowfish gets that passion is the key to great sex, whether that’s sex with your lover or the business of sex; and Blowfish is passionate about finding, appreciating, and promoting passionately made sex products. Just yesterday one of Peggy’s friends, upon seeing the Blowfish review of D&H said, “Oh wow! Blowfish! They’re picky!”

Blowfish is picky. They’re picky because they’re passionate; passionate about the idea that the sex business doesn’t have to be stupid or gross, and that it doesn’t have to be medicalized self-help education either. At Blowfish sex is fun, sex is play, sex is pleasure, sex is passion. And we’re so very happy that our films have a place at Blowfish!

Porn for Beginners?

Wednesday, May 3rd, 2006

Some few weeks ago I came across this exchange on a thread about women and porn in Violet Blue’s section of the J.T. Stockroom Forums:

Opined Sage:

“What about all those dime-store “Romance” novels? Those are porn, just wrapped up in a cute, easy to digest form. I remember getting my hands on one of those when I was 15, way before I even knew what porn was, and just getting aroused out of my mind at some of the sex scenes in those books. Sad that some women never get farther along in their sexuality than the watered down versions in romance novels.

“I love porn- I think that, with everything, it just depends on how you approach it. Sure, there’s girls in porn who are being victimized by the people who make the porn, but that boils down to a problem of education- these girls just didn’t know what they were getting into. Personally, I love porn! I think most women have huge hang-ups about their bodies and their own sexuality, and so porn becomes taboo because “If s/he really loved me he’d stop looking at porn and pay attention to me!” The problem of misunderstanding between sexual partners compounds into a hatred of porn, because porn is then seen as a wedge driving partners apart. The porn watcher feels ashamed, because they don’t see anything wrong with porn, and the other person in the relationship feels angry and neglected because they don’t understand the fun, playful aspect that comes with watching porn.”

I had a lot to say about this post, most of it not very nice, but I held my tongue. My dear friend Ell did not:

Sage, I don’t know if I’m misunderstanding you on the romance thing - forgive me if I am. I think I could safely say that the majority of those “romance novels” are better crafted, with greater respect for the reader than most porn DVD’s. If they represent some kind of “watered down” version of sexuality it certainly sells well. I’m not sure if sexuality exists on a continuum — that you need to move from soft core romance to more explicit versions to achieve some kind of sexual growth or saying that you don’t enjoy a lot of porn is somehow because you’re less sexually advanced, adventurous or insecure. I’m almost sure that readers of romance are able to have and do have really good and wild sex. I think I get a bit disappointed with porn because it very rarely depicts anything that’s as good as the sex I have in my bedroom.

“In the last couple of years I think I like the idea of porn, more than I like most porn I’ve watched to be honest”

(On of the reasons I like Ell so much is because she can express herself with a gentle resolve that challenges people’s ideas without attacking them personally. I wish I could be more like her.)

This exchange has been rattling around in my brain, knocking things loose until today when I visited Ms.Naughty’s blog. Her entry is ostensibly a warm review for Candida Royalle’s Eyes of Desire, but it’s got a few sharp words for the phrase “Good for couples and beginners”. Says Ms. Naughty:

“Candida’s films feature fairly vanilla sex, and she’s less interested in close-up, gynecological shots than she is in depicting realistic, emotionally engaged sex. Not many other porn filmmakers do this, so I always wonder why reviewers consistently expect her to create the same stuff as everybody else.

“I also frequently read the comment that the film is “Good for couples and beginners.” I find the phrase rather irksome, to be honest, because it’s always said in a slightly condescending manner. As if we girlies can’t handle the heat, or maybe the people who will enjoy this type of film are not grown up enough yet to enjoy the refined adult tastes of gonzo anal destruction…

“Perhaps it’s just me. I’ve seen far too much porn in the last few years and now all I want to see in a porn film is something different and engaging. It’s entirely possible that some women will find Eyes of Desire to be boring because it’s so vanilla. That’s fine. But I liked it, and I would recommend it - even if you’re not a beginner or a couple…”

Amen, Ms.Naughty, Amen.

Perhaps (perhaps) Candida Royalle’s films (or dime store romance novels) are a little like wine spritzer, or a dacquari, or some other sort of “girlie drink” with a paper parasol in it.

Perhaps. And maybe that’s not to everyone’s taste.

But it does not follow that “the hard stuff” is comparable to a 20 year-old single malt scotch, or even a bottle of cheap red table wine.

I’ll leave the rest of the analogy to you, dear readers; I don’t trust myself to continue. I don’t have Ell’s gift for gentleness, and I don’t want to insult anyone over their taste in porn. Not today at least….;-)

More Love for Damon and Hunter

Friday, February 17th, 2006

ManNet.com’s Brent Blue opens his review of Damon and Hunter: Doing it Together by saying:

“Damon DeMarco and Hunter James look like the gay couple next door in this very intimate rendering of sex. This isn’t really about porn, but lovemaking. As Damon says: “This is not about procreation.” It’s about their pleasure as a couple, which is exactly what the films attempts to capture, a very personal romantic coupling, simply shot so as to allow the full nature of the moments to stand on their own, rather than be washed over by the gloss of porn.”

It’s the p-word again. A reminder that even to people who like porn, it’s a word that means something, that while it may connect to the audience sexually, leaves some many other aspects of human need and desire unaddressed, or even belittled. A reminder of why I’ve grown uncomfortable with the word. But the other day, I saw something that reminded me why I fell in love with porn, and what drew me to wanting to make sexual art.

Somewhere on the vast internet (I’ve lost the link) someone post photos from an early 80s issue of Playboy; Girls of the Military I think it was. The women were, of course, pretty. But they weren’t caricatures of glamour, at least not to my eye. No, rather than seeming like confections of the photographer’s, stylist’s and surgeon’s skill, they seemed like the very beautiful women I see ever day; my daughter’s schoolmate’s mother, the college girls who life guard in the summer, my own wife.

I’ve undressed all of these women (and many others!) in my mind’s eye, and the images in my imagination are as lovingly crafted as these Playboy images were. The light is gentle and flattering, whatever “flaws” or “faults” the object of my desire might have, they somehow disappear in the kind gaze of my desire.

Of course back when I had an opinion, I much preferred Penthouse to Playboy. I like tits fine, but for me the real treat lies further South. Playboy always seem vaguely gynophobic, while Penthouse was lustily gynophilic! But in either case, back in the “golden age” of these magazines, you could actually see photographs where (a small aspect of) the subject of sex was treated with the care and craft that is devoted to things like food or clothing; and seeing some these photos again reminded me of the promise that porn once seemed to hold – that someday soon we would see sexuality, our own raw fleshy need to connect, rendered with that same loving eye.

Mr. Blue closes his review by saying:

“[Describing the end of the film] Back at the interview, both note that as adult film stars, they have had “sex” on camera, but not “sex,” as Damon says. If you see Damon’s face as he says this, you’ll know the difference. What was just shown was their version of sex, rather than porno sex. However, they once again express an exhibitionist side in saying that they hope not only gay men, but also woman and even straight men can see this and “get some ideas,” learn about sex from two gay men who seem to honestly love each other.

“Shot by Tony and Peggy Comstock (I’m assuming Peggy is a woman, which perhaps does make the statements above even more true), the scene here is revealing and trusting by Damon and Hunter in allowing the viewer into their private life. The scene is rather short [19 minutes] and purposely unglamorous, so it’s often hard to know what really went on [I think he means “Is this real reality or fake reality?”), but it is clear that these two men are doing something different than just fucking for the camera. There is emotion here, not faked, not acted, but truthful. It’s an alternative to porn. Not better, not worse, just a different side. Reality porn, so to speak.”

Or course I am very happy and very flattered by Brent’s thoughtful review, that he’s seen and appreciated the care and enthusiasm, that “loving eye” that we bring to our work. (You can read the rest of of Brent’s review here.) But it also makes me feel a little wistful. How is it that loving, crafted images of sex became the “alternative”, the exception, instead of the rule?