Archive for the ‘romance’ Category

The Romance of Fucking

Friday, July 8th, 2005

This blog is getting a little heavy with all that talk talk talk; which is good, but needs balanced out. What better to provide some balance than some hype Hype HYPE!

About a month ago I was contact by journalist Amy Wolf, who was writing an article on DIY porn. We’ve already spent too much time on how I feel about the word “porn” so you can imagine she got an ear-full on that score. She also got an ear-full on DIY.

It’s not that what I do isn’t DIY (I am doing it myself), and even by the meager standard of the indie film world, our work isn’t low-budget, it’s no budget. But DIY porn conjures image of a gang of friends getting together fueled by ambition and good intention, hoping to change the world with a PD150 and Powerbook.

That’s not quite how things work here. We do shoot on video, but we also shoot plenty of 16mm film. I don’t pay my crew top dollar, but I do pay them union scale. The people who appear on camera are also properly compensated. In short, the investment of resources in each film we make is measured in tens of thousands of dollars, which is still a pityfully small amount of money by film standards, but not really what people think of when you say “DIY porn”.

Well the upshot of this is that Ms. Wolf decided not to include us in the DIY article (Oh no!). Instead she wrote an entire article about Comstock Films (Hooray!). Some highlights from Ms. Wolf’s article:


“Comstock Films has managed to break into new filmic territory by refocusing on the intense emotional bonds that fuel physical intimacy. The films empowers couples to reclaim the right to engage in, enjoy and watch hot, raunchy sex. Xana, of Xana and Dax: Opposites Attract, confesses while sweetly grinning to her lover, “It’s very romantic just to fuck.”
“Tony Comstock seeks to infiltrate the minds of even the most conservative couple who are one step above doing “it” through a hole in the bedsheet. Consequently, he features couples that have traditional, often nuptial, home and sex lives.”

“Although Comstock works with demographically diverse couples, all relationships are rooted in good-old monogamy and fairytale notions of true love.”

“Sex doesn’t have to be bad, and neither do sex films. In the early 70s, porno movies were part of a larger social struggle against shame. The proliferation of porn stemmed from a Supreme Court ruling that clarified nudity as not obscene. Tony Comstock cannot fix or undo porno, but he will continue making movies until everyone, even your great aunt on oxygen and your fourth-grade teacher, are having copious amounts of good sex – and not feeling ashamed.”

You can read the rest of Amy’s very nice write up here.

Thank you Amy Wolf!

-TC

Xana and Dax Garners Another Five Star Review on ADT!

Tuesday, May 31st, 2005

There’s another review for Xana and Dax up on AdultDVDTalk.com, another five stars, this time from Loraine, who some of you may know from her blog or from the Smart Girls Porn Club. Says Loraine:

“I just saw a love story. One with all the makings of a fine, sweet tale — you know how it goes — the handsome young man who spies the pretty woman at a party and smiles, but doesn’t think he stands a chance with her. The pretty woman who swoons a little when she sees him walk by, the friend who acts as the conduit for secret messages about the woman’s desire to know him and kiss him…want to know how it turns out?“Well, so did I — desperately.

“It turns out, in this romantic real life story, that Xana and Dax are perfectly suited to each other, they fall deeply in love, they learn what turns each other on and they have hot sex. In teaming up with filmmaker, Tony Comstock, they get to tell us their love story and show us their lovemaking. It’s a beautiful and delightfully sexy tale, just like a good love story should be, and exactly the kind of story I love…

“Xana and Dax: When Opposites Attract, from Comstock Films is a great pleasure to watch alone and a joy to share with a lover. It’s sex filmed with grace, style and skill, with respect for the lovers and for the viewer. With his distinctive style, Tony Comstock has cleverly combined visual beauty, sexual heat, sympathetic characters and a compelling story into a sexy, beautifully made film that I’m delighted to recommend.”

(You can read the rest of Loraine’s review here.)

It’s interesting to note that Astroknight and Loraine have very different perspectives on sexually explicit films. Astro is a dedicated, long-time viewer of hardcore material, with over 1600 reviews to his credit. Loraine is a relative newcomer, on a self-described (and largely failed) quest to find “watchable porn”. Astro loves porn, Loraine is largely disappointed by it. Some (not me, of course) might even point out that Astro is a man and Loriane is a woman. But despite this “vast gulf” that separates them, Astro and Loraine agree that Xana and Dax: When Opposites Attract is something to be excited about, something that turns them on, something makes them happy.

If I seem to bristle at the label “porn for women” it’s because that seems to imply that in making a film that someone like Loraine can enjoy, you can’t make a film that someone like Astro can enjoy too. I don’t think this so. Men and women enjoy sex. Men and women enjoy watching movies. And if you make a good movie about sex, men and women will enjoy that too!

-T.C.

Tell Us Your Own Love Story

Saturday, February 26th, 2005

We make films about being in love, and how much fun it is to have sex with someone when you’re in love. One of my fondest hopes is that our films might help start an evening off in the right direction, might help set the tone for a night of lusty, lovingly carnal revelry.

In the coming weeks we’re going to set up a page on our Website specifically to solicit and share people’s stories of how watching a DVD from Comstock Films helped them set the mood for a romantic evening. But in the meantime, if any of you feel like jumping in right now with a story of how watching Marie and Jack helped set the mood for a loving and lusty evening, we’d love to hear it!

-T.C.