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  • Warning: Spoilers
    Hardly to be recommended, this pair of Pure Taboo vignettes does feature one serious, at times engrossing drama, so much better than the usual misogyny on steroids that keeps the low-end fans of Bree Mills' porn happy.

    Title segment stars petite Gracie May Green in a perversely downbeat role that recalls, in porno circles, the classic "Devil in Miss Jones" turn by Georgina Spelvin five decades previous. She is introduced in the bathtub, masturbating and then ominously plunging her head underwater in almost suicidal-looking fashion.

    Via the internet, she hooks up with Jake Adams in hopes that as potentially kindred spirits he will choke her, not in a murderous way but in a Robin Williams style (RIP) erotic asphyxiation.

    This concept surely fits within the Pure Taboo rubric, and is successful merely on the basis of a serious mood maintained by series director Craven Moorehead and the novelty of it all. Gracie brings panache to the role, but Jake's acting is poor as usual, and the downbeat, tentative ending is uninspired copout, rather than the exclamation mark such material requires.

    Supporting vignette is awful, the sort of stupid tripe one has come to expect from the PT series. Titled "Birthday Surprise", it's an asinine premise, merely used to get some mechanical threesome action underway. River Fox is certainly sexy playing an unbelievable character, who's coming of age at 18 has long been looked forward to her fake parents, who stole her from the hospital as a baby in hopes of having their way with her sexually when she's "legal". Instead of getting mad at Sarah Vandella and Tommy Gunn she embraces the concept and a hot threesome results.

    This bit of idioicy certainly fits in with our current political era, where lying, cheating, projecting, etc. Has become de rigeur for Trumpian Republicans to hold onto power.

    For pornographers, the incest gimmick is inventively exploited by having the girl unrelated to her putative parents via the kidnapping, yet the entire episode makes light of the real-life phenomenon (and prevalence) of incest where young children are abused by real parents or other relatives who have power and proximity to take advantage of them. To say this is in poor taste is a vast understatement.