Archive for the ‘Xana & Dax’ Category

The Comstock Films Video PodcastXana and Dax: When Opposites Attract, Episode 7

Monday, February 27th, 2006

Episode 7 of Xana and Dax: When Opposites Attract brings us what has been called “the most intimate 69 ever captured on film”. It’s certainly one of the most beautiful moments of mutual pleasure we’ve ever had the privilege of seeing, and it’s our privilege to offer it to you!

For your iPod or iTunes:
pcast://feeds.comstockfilms.com/ComstockFilmsVideoPodcast

All others:
http://feeds.comstockfilms.com/ComstockFilmsVideoPodcast

And don’t forget, if you like what you see, you can get the entire film on DVD from The Comstock Films DVD Shop.

Enjoy!

The Comstock Films Video PodcastXana and Dax: When Opposites Attract, Episode 6

Monday, February 20th, 2006

Hello. It’s time for another installment of the Comstock Films Video Podcast.

This episode of “Xana and Dax: When Opposites Attract” take us further into Xana and Dax’s tender but passion lovemaking. A small glass of baby oil comes out to add some lubricity to the proceedings, and Xana and Dax’s hand and mouths feast on each other.

For your iPod or iTunes:
pcast://feeds.comstockfilms.com/ComstockFilmsVideoPodcast

All others:
http://feeds.comstockfilms.com/ComstockFilmsVideoPodcast

And don’t forget, if you like what you see, you can get the entire film on DVD from The Comstock Films DVD Shop.

Enjoy!

A Nooner with Xana and Dax

Wednesday, February 8th, 2006

A viewer comment from Uncut DVDs, one of our Australian retailers:

I bought this DVD [Xana and Dax] beacuse my wife wasn’t keen on the traditional ‘bloke’ porn movies, and I heard that this studio made great couples films. I have to say that I haven’t been disapointed. My wife likes the natural style of the movie and she has even watched it by herself while I’ve been at work - that’s never happened before. If you are searching for movie which is ‘gentle’ enough for your partner but will still get her fired up then this movie is for you. I can’t wait to buy some of their other films.

Of course I am delighted by the thought of this fellows wife spending the afternoon with my movie while he’s at work. Feels just a little naughty, in just the right way!

The Comstock Films Video PodcastXana and Dax: When Opposites Attract, Episode 4

Monday, February 6th, 2006

It’s time for another instalment of Xana and Dax: When Opposites Attract.

In this week’s episode of “Xana and Dax: When Opposites Attract”, we hear Dax tell us just how much he loves Xana’s plush, round behind; and here Xana tell us why offering herself up to her husband doggy-style is her favorite way to reach orgasm!

For your iPod or iTunes:
pcast://feeds.comstockfilms.com/ComstockFilmsVideoPodcast

All others:
http://feeds.comstockfilms.com/ComstockFilmsVideoPodcast

And don’t forget, if you like what you see, you can get the entire film on DVD from The Comstock Films DVD Shop.

Enjoy!

The Comstock Films Video PodcastXana and Dax: When Opposites Attract, Episode 3

Tuesday, January 24th, 2006

It’s time for another instalment of Xana and Dax: When Opposites Attract.

In Episode 3, we hear Xana and Dax tell us about their “opposites”: his thick dark hair, her fine blonde hair; his lean, dark body, her pale, voluptuous body. And we see how “opposites attract” as Xana and Dax move easily from one delight to another – her mouth on him, his mouth on her, each searching for ways to give pleasure.

For your iPod or iTunes:
pcast://feeds.comstockfilms.com/ComstockFilmsVideoPodcast

All others:
http://feeds.comstockfilms.com/ComstockFilmsVideoPodcast

And don’t forget, if you like what you see, you can get the entire film on DVD from The Comstock Films DVD Shop.

Enjoy!

Real Sex (No, Really)

Thursday, September 22nd, 2005

Two days ago I received a note from a fellow who, although he liked many things about Marie & Jack and Xana & Dax, was rather disapointed that both love scenes ended with external ejaculation. Here’s a bit from his note (used by permission):

These videos have what I have been looking for that is missing from the usual “porn” videos with one exception. You claim that these represent real sex but in both cases the man pulled out prior to cuming and we were shown proof that he came…

Maybe these couples actually have sex in this way but I doubt it. If they do I suggest using some couples who do not as well. This was a particular issue in the Xana & Dax video where he spent some time masturbating himself to climax. Why miss out on the wonderful sensations of being in your woman before cuming unless you are not able to do so for some reason. That, to a large extent, ruined the movie for me.

Also, my wife does not often watch explicit videos because she misses the loving relationship aspect of sex that makes it good for her. There is much in these movies that I suspect she would enjoy but I am sure she would be put off by this as well. She has made similar comments about other explicit videos.

He was also concerned that this might also be the case in Matt & Khym, which he had on pre-order. I wrote back:

Dear XXX,

Thank you for your thoughtful e-mail. It very succinctly addresses some of the vagaries of shooting sex scenes of people having unscripted and and undirected sex. With your permission I’d very much like to use your letter in an upcoming blog post. FYI, Matt and Khym’s love scene ends with Matt ejaculating inside of Khym. No particular effort is made to “prove” that he ejaculated, but afterwards Khym does reach down to catch a little on her finger and taste it.

Yours,
Tony Comstock

This seemed to (mostly) satisfy his concerns:

From your response I take it that Xana & Dax and Marie & Jack choose to handle the men’s ejaculation without any direction or suggestions. If so I wonder if that is how they normally have sex or if they did it that way because they thought that it might be expected, maybe from watching “normal porn”. You might want to make it clearer to those you film that they don’t have to do things differently, especially that.

I am not complaining if that is normal for them. It just seemed faked because of the way men’s ejaculation is handled in most porn.

The “might make it clearer” comment reminds me of the conversation I had with Desiree in the weeks prior to shooting her and her husband Ben.

“Oh, so you don’t want him to cum all over my face then?” she asked in response to my saying I just wanted them do have nice normal natural sex.

“Um well,” I stuttered, ” I don’t want you to do something you don’t enjoy when it’s just the two of you just because the camera is there, or because you think we want or need you to do something like that.”

“Oh no. I love having Ben blow on my face. I think it’s great, we do it all the time!”

“Well okay then. Please don’t let our being there inhibit you!” (It didn’t. Desiree had three orgasms that were very nearly disturbing in their intensity.)

Meanwhile, a tempest in a teapot seems to be swirling over similar question about what is and isn’t real over at SuicideGirls.com. Between kids, station wagon, suburban tract house, and a BMI of 26, I’m not really an alt kind of guy, (and even when I was young and broke and played my guitar too loud, I still wasn’t wasn’t an alt kind of guy) so I don’t really know that much about SuicideGirls, besides the fact that the chicks have downtown hairstyles, tats and piercings, and the photography style tends toward the deep focus/small focal plane style that I don’t really dig.

I do know what I thought I knew about SG, which was that I thought it was some hip, alternaporn site, run by technologically empowered female scenesters who were using the internet and cheap digital cameras to deconstruct the traditional pin-up. Okay, that’s cool in concept, even if I don’t really dig it as art, let alone as stroke material. Now it turns out that maybe SG is just some site run by some guy who’s making money off a lot of 18 year old girls’ yearnings to be a little less anonymous in the celebrity-obsessed world that we inhabit. Somehow that doesn’t seem quite so hip.

So what’s it all about, Alfie?

Back during that internet thing, people would sometimes say, “Content is king,” and the inflection they used seemed to indicate they thought they were offering a pearl of wisdom. Well here’s my pearl of wisdom, at least when it comes to making sex films: Context is king. Context is king, and when you use ‘reality’ as your conceit you walk a fine line. Most audiences are sophisticated enough to know that “the truth” is not the same thing as what you would have seen if you were on the set that day. But they’re also sensitive enough to know when the “reality” you try and present is too far way from what they would have felt if they had been on the set.

I don’t know what the “truth” is about SuicideGirls. The truth about Comstock Films is that all the way along there is a conspiracy between me and the couple I’m working with to present a very idealized portrait of their sexual relationship. It’s no more (or less) real than the nightly news or a novel.

Before their scene I asked Matt and Khym how they intended to enjoy Matt’s orgasm (experience has taught me not to assume that a “real couple” doesn’t enjoy the “so fake” external pop shot). When they told me that he was going to cum inside of her, I made a couple of suggestions for how we could visually signal the audience “yes, it really did happen.” The result can be seen in that lovely Comstock Films button that Mrs.C made for us.

Does that ruin it for you? I hope not.

Porn for Women Continued…

Monday, September 19th, 2005

Okay, enough with the good deeds and crybaby posts. How about some good old fashioned shameless self-promotion!

In their article “Was That Movie Good For You?” this month’s Tango Magazine offers their advice on the never ending search for erotic films that men and women can enjoy watching together, and we’re pleased that for the second time in as many months, Marie and Jack: A Hardcore Love Story occupies the top spot on a films for women/couples list. Says Tango:

“Marie and Jack, porn stars married in real life, have the genuine chemistry and knowledge of each other’s bodies to make this film sizzle. It starts slowly, with the couple discussing the intimate details of their love, before getting down and dirty. “

Tango also gave a nod to Xana and Dax: When Opposites Attract, as well as titles from Libido Films, Candida Royale, Veronica Heart, and Maria Beatty.

Having sex together is fun, and watching sex together can be fun too – if you find the right movie – so these sorts of articles are a perrenials in both men’s and women’s magazines, and I’m please but not surprised to see Marie & Jack and Xana & Dax mentioned.

But what I want to know is which one of these magazines will have the stones to put Damon and Hunter: Doing it Together on the list? A lot of women have been pretty good natured about their husbands/boyfriends enjoyed a little hot lesbo action (Tango’s list includes an all-woman BDSM title). Do you think men are willing to be as indulgent when it comes to their honeys getting off a beautiful man on man love? We’ll soon see.

-TC

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

Dear Abby…

Tuesday, June 21st, 2005

Okay, okay, maybe you’re getting tired of seeing nothing but good reviews for Xana and Dax on my blog. But I’m not! Here are bits and pieces of another very warm review; this time from Abby Ehmann, who some of you may know as Editrix Abby. Says Abby:

“They look and sound and have sex not just like “real people,” but people I’m actually friends with. They talk about how they met, how much they enjoy each other’s bodies and their general love and appreciation for each other in a way that you won’t see in any other ‘porn movie.’ “

I really like that Abby put porn movie in quotes. Ten years ago I called myself a pornographer with a certain roguish pride, “No, it’s not erotica, it’s porn. Cunt and cocks and cum. It’s porn.” (I wanted to distinguish what I did from films that promised the goods, but never delivered.) Not anymore. Porn has become embarrassing (if not down right upsetting) on so many levels it’s sometimes hard to find words. That more than one person has said X&D doesn’t feel “porny” is very gratifying.

Returning to Abby’s review:

“When she sucks his cock, he looks positively beatific; their 69 is almost too intimate. And when they do it doggie style, Xana experiences an eyes-rolling-into-the-back-of-her-head orgasm. Whew! What you see on screen is two people very much in love and truly enjoying themselves both spiritually and sexually. It is hot!

Again Abby is picking up on something I very much wanted to get across. In crafting X&D, I wanted to create a film that felt intensely voyeuristic, intensely private, but I wanted the audience to feel at ease with the intimacy. I wanted to find a way to tell the viewer it’s okay to want to look, it’s okay to want to see, it’s okay to feel turned on.

This is very similar to what Audacia Ray said in e-mail: “[Y]ou’ve managed to do a very delicate thing, which is that you’ve created a film that feels naughty, like the viewer is seeing something he or she isn’t supposed to see, without making the act of watching feel shameful.”

There is a tendency to discount the nice things that people say, but when you hear it twice, you start to let yourself think it might be true!

Near the end of her review, Abby turns her attention to the production design/art direction.

“It was nice not to see the usual tacky LA ranch house or odd personal effects surrounding the sex scenes and be able to focus on the couple themselves. (Sorry, but I am often thrown by particularly egregious lamps, carpets and tchotchkes in the background. Bad taste is so not sexy!)”

That strange brand of aspirational art direction that is practiced in Porn Valley has to be one of the most bizarre aspects of “the industry”. There always seems to be an awkward mismatch between the way the talent looks and talks, the cars they drive and the houses they live in. And the tchotchkes always seem like they’re a 15 year old boy’s idea of classy.

I think the approach is some sort of bastard child of Hugh Hefner’s waspy contrivances and Bob Guccione’s italianine* fantasies, but back in the Seventies, when Hef and Bob were establishing their signature looks, they were working with real money. You can’t do a the club/palazzo/chateau fantasia on the cheap (well you can, but it looks like crap), so we try to do “no art direction” art direction (in the hopes of not giving the audience a reason to start giggling). It’s nice that Abby noticed. (And even nicer she didn’t giggle!)

You can read the rest of Abby’s very nice review at Eros-Zine.com.

Thanks Abby!

-TC

* Mrs. C is Brooklyn born and bred. Italianine is what happens when italianate goes too far.

The Power of the Press

Friday, June 10th, 2005

Commenting on yesterday’s blog entry, Housewyfe echos my own mix of excitement and disappointment when she writes:

Frustrating that Ms. Woods seems more intent on writing something smart (couldn’t think of a better word) than actually providing the information so many of us are seeking. Regardless of her navel gazing, I hope the mention brings you lots of attention/business. :)

She’s not alone. This morning brings several notes that are similar in tone. Tony Comstock and his army of horny middle-aged women are enraged that Stacey Grenrock Wood has failed to use her platform at Esquire magazine to spread the good news – that sex is beautiful and films of sex can be beautiful too! Well okay – not enraged, but disappointed. I am pleased, and touched by this show of support; perhaps even a little startled to have “devoted fans”. But having (mostly) recovered from my own wounded pride, I do think it’s worth thinking about this from her point of view.

Ms. Wood’s wit not withstanding, she is in a bit of a bind. As I said to El last night, “If a friend asked you to recommend a sexually explicit film she could enjoy (with or without her husband) and you couldn’t offer them something from Comstock Films, what would you tell them?” The stock answers and the “established porn aesthetic” leave a lot of people cold. Even if Ms. Wood’s writing style usually brimmed with sincerity, I wouldn’t blame her for being flippant about porn.

The other thing to keep in mind is Esquire is “the big leagues”. Columnist are hired for their voice, their writing style; not to spend time talking to people like me. I was contacted by an intern researcher, who sent along his notes to Ms. Wood. She never spoke to me and (I’m guessing) she didn’t have time to follow up on the research info herself. (How else does a company that makes films of lesbians, by lesbians, and (mostly) for lesbians ends up in the pages of Esquire magazine?)

The researcher heard my whole rant about taking a cinematic (rather than pornographic) approach to explicit sex, saw Xana and Dax, and even sent me a note saying “I just got done watching Xana and Dax and it is good stuff.” By the time I was done with him, if he wasn’t actually a convert, he was receptive to the idea that seeing people have sex doesn’t have to mean lowering your standards and expectations (well) below the Sunday bassfishing show level. But he was in the New York office, and I’d be very surprised if the DVD ever made its way to the columnist, who lives out in Los Angeles. (I sent her e-mail offering to send her a copy of her own. We’ll see if she take us up on it.)

In any event, George is right: the important thing is that they spell your name correctly. In the overnight, we’ve see a 20-fold increase in the number of people finding their way to ComstockFilms.com using the search string “comstock films”. That’s probably a better response than if we had paid to run a full page ad!

-TC