Category Archives: Xbiz

Xbiz: Women in Porn

“Who wants to see that?” was a question many pioneers of the feminist porn movement heard when they were starting out. Now, “porn for women” is coming into its own, with the volume, mainstream attention, and distribution channels to support it. To help you tap into the growing women and couple’s market, Xbiz got intimate with female pioneers, female-friendly retailers, and festival organizers. We also took a look at the talent paving the way for a generation of porn for women that is also for men.

What We Talk About When We Talk About Porn for Women

Neither “porn for women” nor “feminist porn” implies that men won’t love this genre. Alison Lee of Toronto retailer Good For Her, which founded the Feminist Porn Awards, said: “Feminist porn at its most basic is porn that takes a female viewer into account, and shows agency, pleasure, and consent regardless of the gender of the people on screen.”

Lisa Vandever, co-founder and director of NYC’s CineKink, which showcases erotic filmmakers from adult and mainstream, feels the market is opening up to the “shocking” revelation that women desire sex and want to see it on-screen…often in a different way than has traditionally been depicted.

So when we talk about porn for women, we’re really talking about a different perspective and style of sex on screen. As Coyote Days, producer for Good Vibrations’ new distribution line Good Releasing (and its labels HeartCore, Pleasure-ed and Reel Queer), said: “[The idea of porn for women] is a really complex conversation. We’re making amazing, cutting-edge artistic films that run at a different pace.”

Lee added, “There are also a large number of men looking for movies with a bit of context, movies they can watch feeling confident that the performers were treated well, or that they can watch with their female partners. I think this is the biggest thing most mainstream porn misses: So-called ‘porn for women’ has a huge male audience.”

As a market indication, Good For Her’s DVD sales have tripled in the last three years. Since the Feminist Porn Awards were founded in 2006, they grew from a single night of female erotica with 250 guests to two nights with 700 guests (70% women) aged 18 to 70. Berlin’s similarly indie, but not female-centric, pornfilmfest, wrote black figures for the first time last year since its inception in 2006. Even though Good Releasing (founded in 2009) only had four films out by the AVN Awards deadline, they received three nominations. Their offerings were also screened at the Feminist Porn Awards, pornfilmfest, and CineKink.

“The skepticism over validity and viability [of women-run studios] has waned,” Days said. “In 2010 people will really know our lines.” Their 20-plus titles can be found in many large chains and new deals are in talks. They intend to get their educational series “Pleasure-ed” into mainstream retailers.

For a taste of the variety, some directors to have worked with Good Releasing include award-winning queer film director Courtney Trouble, L.A. photographer Dave Naz, and fine art photographer/adult director Carlos Batts, whose adoration of muse and wife April Flores is apparent in his films. Androgynous gender representation, killer soundtracks, candid interviews with sex workers making their adult debut, and sex that eludes gay/straight/bi classifications—these films are not typical. <- i think it’s stronger to end on “these films are not typical.”

So, when we talk about porn for women, we also talk about introducing consumers to porn as a film art. An art with genres so distinct, that they can be compared to the difference between, say, film noir, the blockbuster, and the French New Wave. It’s all part of the “mainstreaming of porn” that we keep hearing about. When consumers turn into connoisseurs, the market shifts.

The Old Guard Nurtures the New

The pioneers of women’s porn—exemplified in Europe by Petra Joy and stateside by Candida Royalle (who started as a performer in the Golden Age of porn)—certainly can empathize with industry skepticism. Royalle filmed the first U.S. couples erotica and turned this concept into an empire, including the novelty line Natural Contours and Femme Productions, distributed through Adam&Eve. As part of her mission with Femme, Royalle said, “I’m only interested in women directors who are doing something different to standard porn and have their own vision.”

In Europe, Petra Joy, once active in the anti-porn movement, decided to make porn she wanted to see: safe sex, close attention to set and costume detail, and raw amateur performers. Her first offering was Sexual Sushi (2006), which “was in the drawer of distributors for years, until I started getting a lot of press.” After entering mega-adult-retailer Beate Uhse, she said, “It went from there.” Now UK-based Petra is a sought-after spokesperson on porn for women, especially in German-speaking markets.

To support first-time female directors, Joy founded the Petra Joy Awards in 2009. Winners received cash prizes, had their films screened during the pornfilmfest and received distribution in Joy’s Her Porn series—a carefully-curated compilation showcasing international directors such as Marianna Beck, Maria Beatty, Maria Llopis, and Candida Royalle. The second installment is due out this spring. Like Candida Royalle, Joy promotes new work as a distributor, for example the Swedish compilation Dirty Diaries and Marianna Beck’s Free Love.

Joy believes that quality porn for women has a longer shelf life than mainstream fare. She noted that her films, although several years old, are still strong sellers. Her first two still top the sales list of Australia’s WildnWicked.com.au.

Though Europe has a number of compelling directors, including Britain’s Anna Span and Sweden/Spain’s Erika Lust, the content does not always travel. Royalle expressed an interest in distributing Anna Span, but wasn’t sure the “down-home British” content would find a U.S. audience. Similarly, of the four titles Joy has directed, only Feeling It! is available via Femme Productions/Adam&Eve. Conversely, sex educator Jamye Waxman feels that sites like ForTheGirls.com and HotMoviesForHer.com have really democratized distribution. Still, consumers need help finding what they desire.

These women in porn are part of a world-wide web of erotic filmmakers who cross paths at film festivals and promote each other’s work when their visions align. It would be a mistake to say that they all like each other’s approach. But that’s not the point. The point is that a dynamic group of voices is now being heard, and together, they’re causing a commotion.

Article originally published in Xbiz.

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Xbiz: Coco de Mer – Ethical erotica and pleasure done right

What kind of shop would you open if you were the daughter of Anita Roddick, the extraordinary activist who founded the ethical beauty empire The Body Shop? For starters, the store would probably stock fair-trade, environmentally conscious products whenever possible, be involved in education and activism, and do ethical business. You’d call it “Coco de Mer,” after a rare palm seed that pokes fun at our prudishness with its shape (a woman’s bottom, bent over). And it would be the height of erotic luxury. At least, that was Sam and Justine Roddick’s approach.

Since the first store opened in London in 2001, Coco de Mer has been an intelligent and irreverent place to indulge one’s sexuality. Justine Roddick, the head of North American operations, tells Xbiz about her sister’s seed of inspiration and the American launch: “Sam was living in Vancouver, Canada. A friend had told her about this fantastic vibrator, and Sam was fascinated by the shop that sold it—that was aimed at woman—was so clinical and clean, without any real sexual lusciousness to it. She really felt that there was the opportunity to create a warm, sexy, safe place that made you feel sexual and sensual.” With her feminist background that included a focus on sex worker’s rights, Sam Roddick built on her engagement with sex and society.

Justine, who was already living in the U.S., helped her sister develop product ideas, and they discussed opening shop stateside. In 2004, Justine launched CocodeMerUSA.com. In 2006, she opened the Los Angeles store. She says, “We had so many customers in the London store that came from California that it seemed sensible to open up a store with a built-in audience!” In November 2009, they went bi-coastal with a New York City store. The Los Angeles Times describes the store’s interior design as “bordello chic.”

“We are growing, slowly but surely,” Roddick says. “We have no rapid expansion plan, but are committed to opening more stores in a few select cities and countries. Sam and I have an agreement that we only want to open stores in places that we love to go to and only in areas where we would love to shop. … Having said that, we are definitely expanding within our company.”

Coco de Mer is growing their salons and activist efforts, which include working alongside charities to educate customers about issues such as sexual slavery and human trafficking. Justine adds, “One of my mum’s favorite quotes was ‘The job of a citizen is to keep their mouth open.’… It wasn’t a conscious decision to become include an activist ethos into Coco de Mer, we simply don’t know how to do it any differently.”

Their expansion is limited by their production methods. Coco de Mer works with artists and artisans who handcraft some of their pieces. For example, their silk blindfolds are embroidered by a project in India, and feather ticklers are made in Bali of reclaimed wood and cock feathers. Ilya Fleet, a saddle maker, makes select bondage items, as does Paul Seville, whose work is otherwise found in the collections of Vivienne Westwood and Alexander McQueen.

Because of their aesthetics and ethos, Coco de Mer gets enviable press: Vanity Fair, Nylon, Elle, Glamour, Vogue… One could compare it to the respect the international design community gives JimmyJane—a brand which, of course, Coco carries. Also part of their erotic coterie are LELO, FunFactory, Shiri Zinn, Njoy, exclusive perfumes, and bath and body products. Private label lingerie hangs alongside Stella McCartney and Damaris, and Deepak Chopra’s sex book nestles among fact, fiction, photography, and rare erotic books.

With two stores in London and two in the U.S., a visit to Coco de Mer is an event that people Twitter about. At these centers of erotic inspiration, leading sexperts, like Midori, hold salons covering topics from BDSM to blowjobs. Outside of the evening salons and in-store events, their fuel for lust is just waiting for a spark.

The company is actively growing their online presence in the United States so they can reach as many “lovers, adventurers, and dreamers” as possible. CocodeMerUSA.com is home to a comprehensive online store, information about activism, and specially commissioned videos and photo editorials by Eva and John Midgley. They also engage with fans on social media sites like Twitter and Facebook.

“Whether you are shopping in one of our four stores or online, we have created spaces that are sensual, inviting, sexy and inclusive. You can walk into any one of our boutiques and really not know that you are in an erotic store for the longest of times. …This really relaxes people, when you take the fear and shame out of being in an erotic store,” Roddick says.

Customers pop in on their lunch breaks to send naughty photos to their lovers. (The confession booth-style dressing rooms are fitted with cameras that can also send the image for public view on www.CocoDeMerUSA.com.) One of Roddick’s favorite anecdotes involves a 78-year-old women from Texas who came into the store quite by accident: “Before long, she started to tell us that she had been widowed a year before after being happily married for 40-plus years. In the course of the conversation, she revealed that she had never, in her life, had an orgasm, and it was on her ‘bucket list’ of things to achieve. We helped her find a vibrator that we thought would be good, and off she went. The next day she called the store, tearful, to say thank you. She had had her first orgasm!”

Roddick explains, “At Coco de Mer we feel really strongly that pleasure is and should be the focus. That is the journey we are interested in: finding a state of pleasure, celebration of sex and sexuality and intimacy with your lover and yourself. We aren’t interested in being satisfied. That means you are finished, and the job is over!”

www.CocodeMerUSA.com

Twitter: @cocodemerusa

Facebook: www.facebook.com/cocodemerusaevents

Printed in this issue of Xbiz Premiere. See the digital edition at www.xbiz.com