Graphic Sexual Horror
February 28th, 2009Last night I went to see Cinekink’s screening of Graphic Sexual Horror, the Insex documentary by Barbara Bell and Anna Lorentzon. If you get the chance to see it, jump! It was well-done. It left me feeling both profoundly conflicted and aroused: a feeling, after several years of shooting with PD, with which I am familiar.
I’ve worked on both his current softer sites, Hardtied and Infernal Restraints. I never worked for Insex. The documentary took its name from the disclaimer on the site’s splash page: WARNING! GRAPHIC SEXUAL HORROR.
I did follow Insex avidly, from discovering it through its close. I had never seen anything like it. It was bizarre and terrifying and revolting and absolutely riveting.
I didn’t masturbate to it. I mean, it didn’t look like sex. I don’t know if I could have honestly told you that it turned me on.
Everyone comes to bondage porn for different reasons, but 912 still has the best story. When I met 912, she was PD’s girlfriend and videographer. I was more than a little scared of her and the screaming fights I seemed to provoke between her and PD. I was certain she’d walk in during one of PD’s “inspirational” moments with me in the barn, fling her HD camera to the ground, and rip off my head with her bare hands.
Over breadsticks at some dim and greasy Pizza Hut, I asked 912 how she got into modeling. In the film, she tells that story. She’d contacted Insex asking for a private session with PD. Naturally, she was confused and shocked when, after her shoot, they cut her a check! I had never heard such an innocent confession of desire. I do not understand your jealousy, I thought, but … that? I understand that.
I wrote Insex, too. How could I not? And I was emailing with Cyd about modeling at the time that their payment processors pulled out and the site shut down.
I wonder sometimes how I would have turned out if I had shot for Insex. I know I would have done a great many things. Maybe if I had done those things, it would have broken me — but now I never will.
Money was the theme running throughout the documentary. Can consent really exist where there is money, and so much of it? Where does responsibility lie? Many of the girls had drug habits to support. PD dated and played with his models and even, according to some, made work contingent on it. If he respected safewords, he has interesting interpretations of boundaries. Money made Insex lavish, careless, unprofessional and greedy; and then when the money was gone, they had to follow.
I usually embrace the money-and-consent problem. I like the feeling of having endured. Coerce me, baby! I want permission! Until I sort out my issues and get New Age-y with my desires, the money is a great excuse to have fun.
Of course, when people ask me why I don’t do vanilla porn, I tell them I don’t just do porn for the money. I want to do porn that interests me. I love sex; but this, this was irresistible. Maybe the people who ask me that question have never wanted something that much.
For better or worse, the old cast and crew of Insex populate the porn world I know. Matt Williams, Cyd, Angelene, Lorelei Lee — all familiar faces. It was fun to see them all interviewed after years of post-Insex gossip. Apparently, Claire Adams has always been possessed of that unearthly composure. And I was perversely cheered to see a young Princess Donna, threatened with a cattle prod, interrupt a live feed to hiss, “That is a hard limit!” Oh, Princess, how times have changed.
One of PD’s employees was there with his girlfriend. When I left I hugged him and said, “I’ll give you guys a call when I grow the balls again.”
I always need it. It’s just a matter of time.

February 28th, 2009 at 11:08 pm
Great post! I’ve really wanted to see that, but I doubt they’ll show it in boston. Hopefully it will be a DVD sometime. Insex shaped a lot of minds as to what is dark/extreme/etc. You can see the effects of it on other websites and in the kink population in general. Like it or hate it, you can’t deny the power it held, and continues to hold.
March 1st, 2009 at 8:50 am
Cyd was recently let go from Kink.com. Curious to see his next projects. He brings the grittiness of Insex (generally) without the creepiness factor that pd sometimes brought to the table. Which is slightly ironic since Cyd worked with pd.
March 1st, 2009 at 1:19 pm
I do wish I had known about this screening more than a day in advance, as such I couldn’t make it into the city to see it. I hope they screen it somewhere in the northeast again or release it on DVD soon.
I vividly, vividly remember discovering insex back in 2000. It was the “fire and ice” shoot, and I think I watched it as a livefeed. I had always had an interest in BDSM art but until then I had never encountered anything that fascinated me so completely.
Reading the GSH website I was a little surprised to see that pd was a prof. at a school I attended, at about the same time I was there. I don’t think we ever crossed paths. Still, remembering what that place was like, I guess I’m not that surprised after all that he went on to found a site like insex.
Since insex shut down I’ve often wondered how people will remember it it in 20 or 30 years. I have a feeling that it will be viewed in a similar way to how Andy Warhol’s Factory is remembered today. In particular, the intersection between art, money, and fame (or maybe better put as notoriety). So I hope there will be more efforts like this documentary to show how pd and insex set the tone and direction for an entire genre of BDSM art.
September 8th, 2009 at 4:58 pm
“Many of the girls had drug habits to support.
Many? I saw this documentary recently, and I got the impression it was only one of the models, who in the movie was visibly strung out.
February 14th, 2010 at 7:06 pm
[...] the first screening, Calico wrote a fantastic post on the documentary from something of an insider perspective. She had done shoots with Pd, founder of [...]
February 16th, 2010 at 2:48 am
Thanks for coming to the screening, don’t know why I didn’t find your post until now.
And thanks for the review!
The woman that hissed “That is a hard limit!” is actually 62, aka Maya Matthews. The big eyes, the dark curly hair, it seems like a number of people confuse their faces.