The story of a box-office clerk, a punter and a projectionist each interested in one of the others. To complete their love life, they therefore have to take in the porn films in the local cinema where they met each other.
It’s a phenomenon that has almost died out: the porn cinema where films are still screened on celluloid. Actor, writer and director Nolot wanted to make a film about it, before it was too late.
This second part of his trilogy about homosexuality turned into an almost nostalgic love story. For a few euro, the visitors to the nameless porn cinema watch Glowing Eyes (‘the pussy with two heads’). The cashier apparently fancies one of the regular visitors, a charming man in his fifties (played by Nolot himself). The man, in turn, has taken a fancy to the new projectionist, but this boy is fascinated by the charms of the experienced box-office lady. In the lobby, the three tell each other their life stories. There’s less talking in the auditorium. With as few words as possible, the visitors – all of them men – find what they’re looking for: a discharge, adventure or supplementary income, all of this according to unwritten rules and customs. The auditorium, with crooked seats and a floor covered in stains, is not made any more attractive than it is, just like the sexual acts that take place between the visitors. Everything is shown directly without juicy soft focus or horny musical background. The soundtrack is made up largely of the groaning on the silver screen. It is only at the end when the protagonists go home that we hear music. The three of them will work it out
Jacques Nolot (born 31 August 1943 at Marciac, Gers in France), is a French actor, screenwriter and film director. Jacques Nolot was born on 31 August 1943, Marciac, Gers, a small village in Southwest France. A fragile child, Nolot was doted upon by his mother, a woman who had three children with three different fathers. An illegitimate child, Nolot’s family environment was troublesome and from an early age he wanted to run away from home. “The sole elegance my parents had was to allow me to leave. And then to die quickly” he later explained in an interview. At age 16, he was working at the village’s grocery store, when a tourist stopping there offered him to take him to Paris. In the French capital, he worked selling vegetables while taking acting classes. At age seventeen, he decided to move to Cannes in order to become a star. Young and without economical resources, he became the lover of a rich woman and later began hustling for men. His life was the street. At age nineteen, he… read more
Is there a more uncompromising director than Nolot working today? Porn Theatre is a devastating, brutally explicit film. Behind the debauchery and sexual promiscuity are lonely characters wondering what might have been...