Illicit

Illicit

When Vivid auteur Paul Thomas makes a sequel, he’s a little more ambitious than the makers of things like “Throat Gaggers 9″ or “Four Finger Club 21.” Illicit is a sequel to Grudge, (which we’re working on getting in our catalog soon) and it heaps further complications onto the characters from the first film. Here’s the set-up: Kurt Lockwood is secretly in love with successful author Mercedez, but he’s seriously involved with hot blonde stripper Stefani Morgan. (Ah, the eternal struggle between the desires of the mind and the desires of the body . . . except in this case, the smart writer also has the body of a porn star. Hmm. No contest.) Mercedez loves Kurt in return, but she’s married to Trent Tesoro (whose chief motivation in this film appears to be a frustrated desire to have anal sex with Mercedez). In a remarkable act of courage, Kurt and Mercedez decide to dump their significant others and run away together, and they promptly fuck to celebrate, in a scene that manages to capture some of the real liberated passion people might feel in such a situation. Of course, things fall apart, with accidental and intentional betrayals and some profound emotional fallout (especially when Trent blackmails Mercedez into letting him finally fuck her ass, in exchange for peacefully signing the divorce papers).

It’s a decent plot, and it’s likely you’ll be interested to see what happens to the characters, who, of course, do not live happily ever after. The sex is fairly angsty, but the best scene is only tangential to the plot, with Stefani putting on a girl-girl sex show with Samantha Ryan at a strip club. It’s an amazing scene, with the two gorgeous blondes just devouring one another, and there’s no plot-driven emotional component at all: they’re just a couple of consummate professionals, doing their jobs, fucking beautifully for money. Their scene sort of undercuts the whole emotional thrust of the movie, but it’s probably the best girl-girl scene I’ve ever seen, so who cares if it undermines the film’s themes?

This entry was posted on Wednesday, 31 January 2007 at 3:40 pm and is filed under Videos. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. Both comments and pings are currently closed.


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