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Al Goldstein Movies

One of the most infamous of all late 20th century adult entertainment purveyors, Al Goldstein made headlines as the founder and proprietor of Screw magazine. As the title implies, Screw -- not unlike Hustler, which emerged several years later -- embodied something of an indignant response to the airbrushed eroticism of Hefner's Playboy and Guccione's Penthouse. Unlike those entrepreneurs, Goldstein traveled to the most tasteless extremes he could conceive of, with the raunchiest, filthiest photographs, stories, and cartoons imaginable. (His attempts to shock and gleeful vulgarity were not in any way confined to sex; in one notorious incident, Pillsbury sued him for incorporating a cartoon into his magazine that depicted a grotesque act of racist homicide perpetrated by the famous Pillsbury Doughboy; Goldstein won the case and thus expanded the boundaries of free speech to include send-ups of famous brands). The publication achieved considerable success and a massive readership, and coincided with the erosion of censorship in the late '60s and early '70s. Goldstein himself began making public appearances on national television, including -- most memorably -- a controversial mid-'70s appearance on Donahue that was banned in some outlets because affiliates objected to the use of the word "screw" on daytime television.
With the release of the 1975 S.O.S. (Screw on Screen), a raunchy, super-hardcore feature comedy that skewered the talk show format while serving up outrageous sexual acts (and co-starred Goldstein and his cohort, director Jim Buckley), Goldstein briefly seemed poised to enter filmdom, but he achieved more permanent success in front of the cameras as the host of Midnight Blue, a late-night, local access sex show that ran in the Manhattan area for years (and that neatly mirrored the talk show format of the said feature).
A blindingly colorful, outrageous personality, Goldstein drew frequent attention via his own off-the-wall personal behavior, as well; his antics included publishing the personal contact information of his enemies (particularly his female enemies) in his magazine, verbally assaulting journalists in public, and making harassing, intimidating phone calls to colleagues. Unsurprisingly, those acts claimed no real legal protection and got the publisher into hot water. By the early 2000s, The New Yorker and other publications revealed that Goldstein had declared bankruptcy and lost his mansion and townhouse; he spent a particularly low period wandering around the streets of Manhattan and residing in homeless shelters, then began to bounce back via a sales job with a bagel/catering company. Screw magazine continued unabated, however. Goldstein himself was the subject of the James Guardino-directed documentary Porn King: The Trials of Al Goldstein, and participated as an interviewee in Obscene, a film about the life and times of Barney Rosset. ~ Nathan Southern, Rovi
2007  
 
Few television programs have broken as many taboos as Screw publisher Al Goldstein's groundbreaking late-night cable program Midnight Blue, and in this collection of audacious clips, Goldstein takes a look beyond the porn and politics and into the lives of the era's hottest celebrities. From the notorious "Barbra Streisand Porno Movie" to a visit to the 1979 Hooker's Ball where football legend O.J. Simpson offers his candid views on the sexual state of the nation, these are the interviews that would influence and inspire the celebrity gossip programs for decades to come. After witnessing Go-Go's beauty Belinda Carlisle fly solo in a late-night pleasure session, viewers can get a peek at the infamous Rob Lowe sex tape -- footage that nearly brought the handsome Brat Packer's Hollywood career to a screeching halt. Other guests include Arnold Schwarzenegger, R. Crumb, Tiny Tim, Gilbert Gottfried, Larry Flynt, Debbie Harry, Buck Henry, and vintage commercials for some of New York City's hottest adult sweet spots offer an intimate look at a time when the debauchery of the disco era was at an all-time high. ~ Jason Buchanan, Rovi

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Starring:
Al GoldsteinAlex Bennett, (more)
 
2007  
NR  
To countless avant-garde novelists, filmmakers, and playwrights, publisher Barney Rosset -- proprietor of the legendary Grove Press -- qualifies as an undisputed hero. Via scores of in-court legal battles, Rosset fought aggressively and valiantly to defend the release of works as varied as William S. Burroughs' novel Naked Lunch, Henry Miller's novel Tropic of Cancer, and Vilgot Sjöman's classic arthouse film I Am Curious (Yellow). As co-directed by Neil Ortenberg and Daniel O'Connor, the documentary Obscene builds a case not only for the idea that Rosset was utterly indispensable in the battle for freedom of speech that descended on America in the late '60s and early '70s, but that he deserves hearty praise for championing works that pushed accepted moral standards into theretofore unacceptable territory. Via a combination of extensive archival footage and interviews, Obscene traces Rosset's professional and personal life, beginning with his early years at the Parker School and Swarthmore through his involvement in the armed forces and his presence in the Manhattan avant-garde with wife Joan Mitchell during the late '40s and early '50s. The film places heaviest emphasis on (and devotes most of its screen time to) Rosset's censorship battles for various works during the mid- to late '60s, before moving into an exploration of his troubled subsequent years that were marked by financial difficulty, violent attacks from disapproving groups, government surveillance, and a host of other complications. Interviewees include Rosset, Al Goldstein, John Waters, Gore Vidal, John Sayles, and Ray Manzarek. ~ Nathan Southern, Rovi

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Starring:
Barney RossetAmiri Baraka, (more)
 
2006  
 
Adult cinema's lustiest ladies reveal it all as the hottest segments from the legendary late-night cable show Midnight Blue offer a series of intimate encounters with Debbie Does Dallas star Bambi Woods, masturbation guru Annie Sprinkle, The Devil in Miss Jones star Georgina Spelvin, and many more stars from the era affectionately referred to as the "Golden Age of Porn." Watch snow-white innocence take a swift blow as former Ivory Soap girl Marilyn Chambers ponders the prevalence of sex in showbiz before proving without a doubt that she is definitely not a racist, and after notorious bad girl Veri Knotti performs "the most shocking act in adult film" before a live audience at New York's Melody Burlesque, the smoldering Seka discusses the benefits and drawbacks of working with porn legend John Holmes. Additional commercials for the New York swingers clubs of yesteryear, adult theaters, and shady spas take viewers back to an uninhibited time when sex was in style and porno chic ignited the box office. ~ Jason Buchanan, Rovi

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Starring:
Al GoldsteinAlex Bennett, (more)
 
2006  
 
Frequently compared to Larry Flynt and Lenny Bruce for his tireless First Amendment battles, New York smut icon and Screw Magazine publisher Al Goldstein turns a would-be harassment charge into a full-blown media circus in filmmaker James Guardino's incendiary account of the trial that dragged on for two grueling years. As the ultra-sensationalist and shockingly self-destructive Goldstein fights for free speech by launching an all-out press and TV campaign, the shameless headline-grabber's desperate quest to remain in the spotlight following the final episode of the salacious Midnight Blue program may just backfire on him in ways he never imagined. ~ Jason Buchanan, Rovi

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Starring:
Al GoldsteinJoseph Iberti, (more)
 
2004  
 
Seka was one of the biggest stars in adult films in the 1980s; with her firm body and striking platinum-blonde hair, she was among the best-looking women in the porn business, and she appeared in dozens of successful movies, including Dracula Sucks, Blondes Have More Fun, Between the Sheets, Blonde Heat, and Turbo Sex. In the early '90s, Seka left the adult business and dropped out of sight, prompting Swedish fans and documentary filmmakers Christian Hallman and Mangus Paulsson to wonder what became of her. Hallman and Paulsson decided to find out for themselves, and Desperately Seeking Seka documents their search for the elusive former star, as they offer a glimpse of the American porn industry, talk to a number of people who knew and worked with Seka (including Veronica Hart, Nina Hartley, and Al Goldstein), and finally discover the retired starlet living quietly in Chicago. ~ Mark Deming, Rovi

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2004  
NC17  
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Directors Fenton Bailey and Randy Barbato follow up Party Monster by returning to the documentary form of their most popular film The Eyes of Tammy Faye. Rather than examining evangelists-cum-gay icons, this time the duo takes aim at the cultural phenomenon that is and was Deep Throat, the hardcore porn film that cost 25,000 dollars to make and grossed over 600-million-dollars world-wide, making it the most successful independent film of all time. The impact of the film on the public's perception of pornography is discussed, as is the unlikely relationship the film had to the Watergate scandal. Actress Linda Lovelace who later denounced Deep Throat, claiming she'd been forced to make it at gunpoint, appears in interviews that were shot just before her fatal 2002 car accident. ~ Matthew Tobey, Rovi

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1999  
 
Famous for his gargantuan anatomy, John Holmes led a bacchanalian high life surrounded by a bevy of beautiful porn starlets and a plethora of drugs. Veteran documentary director Cass Paley tells of the sordid and often bizarre rise and premature fall of Holmes, porn's most famous performer. Starting from his humble upbringing in the back woods of Ohio, the film chronicles Holmes' rise to fame from the notorious porn-noir Johnny Wadd series, to his 27 fan clubs and his reported $1500-a-day salary. Yet Paley is less interested in the sensational aspects of Holmes' debauched life than in exploring his character. Through interviews and clips from four of the most famous of his 2000 movies, a disturbing dark side emerges from his good old boy image. He had an abusive childhood, kept a wife secret from his porn colleagues for 20 years, pimped out his 15-year-old mistress for drug money, was questioned for his connection with a grisly mass murder, and eventually died of complications from AIDS. In the process, Paley paints a raucous portrait of the porn world during its '70s heyday. Wadd: The Life & Times of John C. Holmes was screened at the 1999 Toronto Film Festival and won the best documentary award at the 1999 South by Southwest Film Festival. ~ Jonathan Crow, Rovi

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Starring:
John HolmesPaul Thomas Anderson, (more)
 
1988  
R  
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When they unknowingly become involved in another couple's scheme involving drugs and murder, an innocent married couple have a difficult time understanding what is happening to them. ~ Kristie Hassen, Rovi

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Starring:
Blake BahnerRebecca Lynn, (more)
 
1975