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John Holmes Movies

John C. Holmes, also known by various names though most famously as "Johnny Wadd," was an American actor in early pornographic feature films and regarded within his own industry as "the King." Endowed with a member variously described as being between eight and 13 inches in length -- an exact figure is not known, and highly disputed -- Holmes was the main male performer in adults-only features of the 1970s. Born in rural Ohio and raised in a string of abusive households, Holmes joined the U.S. Army, married upon discharge, and was a temporarily disabled forklift driver when he entered porn films in 1968. Through 1987 -- when full-blown AIDS began to take him apart physically -- Holmes made an estimated 2,300 films, although many of these were "loops" (short sex films designed for viewing in peepshow booths), and more than a thousand of them have been lost. Some features have Holmes in the cast only by virtue of recycled footage from Holmes' 8 mm loops, so an accurate count of his total film output will likely remain as elusive as the true dimensions of his most renowned body part.

Holmes didn't appear in "classic" '70s porn films -- Deep Throat, Behind the Green Door, and the like. Most of the films John Holmes appeared in were built around him, particularly the "Johnny Wadd" series of features, which began in 1971 and continued up to near the end of his life. "Wadd" was a private detective who became involved in a series of sexual adventures of various kinds; the series was so popular among adult moviegoers that the name "Johnny Wadd" became well known before Holmes' own name did. Toward the end of the 1970s, he appeared in adaptations of historic sex novels that had somewhat bigger budgets than his "Wadd" films, such as The Autobiography of a Flea (1976), Casanova (1977), and The Erotic Adventures of Candy (1979), but most of these projects lost money. Holmes' ordinary, run-of-the-mill features and loops were enormous moneymakers for the porn producers, an industry heavily dominated by figures from organized crime.

By about 1980, Holmes' appeal was in decline, and his increasing unreliability on the set became an issue, so the porn industry stopped using him; by then addicted to cocaine, Holmes turned to petty criminality. This placed John Holmes in the orbit of a number of dangerous criminals, and in the summer of 1981, Holmes was in trouble with a Los Angeles-based band of thieves known as the "Wonderland Avenue Gang." Holmes tipped the gang off to the home of Eddie Nash, a prominent L.A. drug dealer, whom they robbed with Holmes' assistance. Nash took Holmes hostage and forced him to reveal the thieves' whereabouts -- returning to their hangout and, with the help of some additional thugs, beat all but one of the gang members to death, with Holmes at least watching, and possibly participating in some fashion. After being on the run from police for quite some time, Holmes was arrested and charged with murder. He was acquitted, but refused to cooperate with police and served several months in jail for contempt of court. While Holmes did eventually implicate Nash to police, no convictions were handed down in the "Wonderland Avenue murders."

Holmes, his profile raised considerably from interest in the case, returned to porn once he had worked out his issues with the LAPD. By 1985, however, Holmes was diagnosed with AIDS, yet continued to make porn films without informing his partners he was so infected. The porn industry in the United States caught wind of this and barred him from working; Holmes' last films were made in Italy. John Holmes died at age 43, in March 1988. Among his output are a small number of gay films, including the feature The Private Pleasures of John C. Holmes (1983), of which all four principal actors ultimately died of AIDS. Holmes was not bisexual in his private life and observed a strictly "gay for pay" policy as an actor and escort; his early, apparently "lost" gay loops are considered the Holy Grail for those active in the preservation of porn films.

During the better part of Holmes' active career, only adult film fans knew of him, but after his death, his reputation surpassed that of Linda Lovelace as history's best-known, and most notorious, porn film actor. The character of "Dirk Diggler" in the film Boogie Nights (1997) was in part modeled on Holmes, and he was portrayed by Val Kilmer in the film Wonderland (2003). Holmes has been the subject of numerous documentaries, at least four books, and even scholarly dissertations. Apart from his equipment, the most notable aspects of his screen performance were that he was able to act in a limited way and did have a kind of genuine screen presence, even with clothes on -- he is easy to recognize in the most anonymous of his loops. However, the great amount of interest in John Holmes seems to relate mostly to his reputation as a kind of a post-modern outlaw, and neither in his films nor his acting. ~ David Lewis, Rovi
2000  
R  
XXXL: The John Holmes Story documents the tragic life and career of arguably the most famous porn actor in history, John Holmes. The film follows his meteoric rise to fame in the world of pornography, charts his drug-addictions, and offers details about his involvement in the infamous Wonderland Murders before ending with his death from AIDS. ~ Perry Seibert, 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)
 
1982  
 
When two German pilots are shot down over a village not far from London, a pair of little boys -- Londoners both -- find them in the woods and then have to decide whether to help the pilots or turn them in. The father of one of the boys was killed by Germans when he was escaping his sinking ship in a lifeboat, an act that would not argue for any reciprocal mercy on the son's part. Both boys are staying with an off-beat British couple (a captain of the Home Guard and a French school teacher) whose viewpoints on life contrast greatly with the way the two boys were raised -- not making their decision any easier. ~ Eleanor Mannikka, Rovi

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Starring:
John BardonStacey Tendeter, (more)
 
1979  
R  
Part of a late-'70s revival of interest in horror and particularly the character of Dracula, this soft-core horror comedy was directed by Philip Marshak, featured a bevy of porn stars, and was released the same year as the somewhat similar but far more successful vampire spoof Love at First Bite. The legendary vampire Count Dracula (Jamie Gillis) preys on shapely women by night, but he's got a problem: he can only consume the blood of virgins. With the help of his fly-consuming, sniveling assistant Renfield, the count attempts to seduce the comely Mina (Annette Haven) over to the side of the undead, but first he must avoid the intrepid Professor Van Helsing and his wooden stakes. Hewing somewhat faithfully to the original novel by Bram Stoker, Dracula Sucks was the second nudity-heavy adult film of the same name and featured generous amounts of skin and sexual situations, as well as porn favorites Seka and John Holmes in supporting roles. ~ Karl Williams, Rovi

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1978  
 
When she becomes the local lonely-hearts columnist, the woman journalist in this story becomes privy to a series of feminine and other sexual fantasies sent in by her readers. When she tries to answer their letters, she gets drawn into some erotic, but highly unlikely, situations in this Australian soft-porn fantasy feature. ~ Clarke Fountain, Rovi

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Starring:
Rick Cassidy
 
1976  
 
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A noted Australian researcher and sexologist presents his findings concerning the Top Ten female sexual fantasies in lusty detail in this erotic pseudo-documentary. Watch as beautiful women engage in incestuous intercourse, find religion in most unusual places, make love to each other, and use pain to pleasure the men in their lives. ~ Sandra Brennan, Rovi

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1973  
R  
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A TV reporter becomes obsessed with a story about voyeurism in this film also known as Sex Through a Window. ~ Jason Ankeny, Rovi

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1972  
 
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When a prominent plastic surgeon loses his lovely wife in a particularly grisly manner, his grief is such that he soon undergoes a series of insane experiments designed to repair and reassemble her on the operating table and make her live again -- provided he can procure an assortment of substitute parts from unwilling female donors. With the aid of his slavering hunchbacked assistant, the deranged doc hypnotizes young women and lures them back to his lab, where they soon go under the knife. A cheap and lurid gorefest in the mode of Herschel Gordon Lewis (who actually appears in a guest wraparound on the long-defunct United Video release), the premise is played for sick laughs, which only seem to accentuate the film's overall sleaziness. ~ Cavett Binion, Rovi

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1969  
 
A man uses his powers of persuasion to convince women to support him in this soft-core sexploitation drama. Carl (Tommy Toole) is a suave but forceful guy who has talked his loyal girlfriend Gerry (Coleen Murphy) into prostituting herself to help pay the couple's bills. Rather than get a job of his own to help out, Carl recruits another woman to work the streets on his behalf, Sherrie (Sue Peters), a situation which does not please Gerry, though she hesitates to object to Carl's plans. One night, Carl tells Gerry and Sherrie that he's hired them out to perform a Lesbian show as entertainment at a swinger's party. Neither has had experience with other women, but their hesitance disappears when Carl instructs them to rehearse for the lucrative performance. While their names do not appear in the credits, adult film legends Uschi Digard and John Holmes can be seen briefly during the final orgy sequence, which was filmed prior to their rise to fame. ~ Mark Deming, Rovi

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