Thursday, November 17, 2011

Sex: The Annabel Chong Story (1999, Gough Lewis)

"Sex: The Annabel Chong Story" is possibly one of the best documentaries on the porn industry, yet it also sums up societal indiscretion. Annabel Chong represents the forefront of a generation dependent on making a name for themselves via debauchery and long-term bodily harm to appease the reactionary public.

Chong is a now retired, unattractive former Singaporian porn actress who became famous throughout America and most of Europe for performing in the world's largest gang-bang scene at the time. She fucked 70 men - most of which were off the streets - 251 times in 10 hours; a record that has since been broken. This rather tedious documentary covers the before-and-after of this new feat of exhibitionism in the most exploitive way possible.

It doesn't take the viewer long to realize that Annabel Chong, as a fully clothed individual running her yap, is an awful subject for a documentary. Though, listening to her attempts at making sense of her mission of over-the-top sexual degradation I found interesting, yet, at the same time, repugnant over time. Weak females yearning for some kind of notoriety in a typically last-ditch resort of someone with no real passions or personality is something all-too prevalent in today's society. It's become all too common for both males and females in today's culturally deprived, deteriorating, and directionless society to avoid contributing an actual skill by simply nailing your testicles to a table like Steve-O or fucking some brain dead mook on night-vision camera like Paris Hilton. I saw no redeemable qualities behind Annabel Chong's forced and empty sex babble and inane lack of reasoning behind what she was trying to accomplish by having 300 dicks (her initial goal) in her. Frankly, she's retarded.

Of course, throughout the entire the movie, the possibility of Chong enduring some type of sexual abuse as a child seemed fathomable and, as it turns out, low and behold, she was gang-raped in the storage room in a subway station. Contributing factor? Seems like, in this age of Jackass pranks, professional party girls, and ridiculous viral videos, it no longer takes an unbalanced mind to conceive the notion to attempt and/or pull off "outrageous" behavior for the sake of fleeting public "respect". The 22-year old Chong claimed, almost hesitantly, that the possibility of contracting HIV during the gang-bang was not a concern.

Throughout the film, Chong shows many instances of being a naive dolt with a habit of dressing like an intellect when featured in certain interviews, as if wearing glasses and a dress suit will add any kind of credibility to her embarrassing ambitions. Her look shifts from mousy women's rights activist, to slovenly bull dyke, to simply wearing T-shirts that read "SLUT". Again, her points on the subjects of socio-political ethics are vague and clearly recited rhetoric. At one point she claims she's trying to bring "a more unified view to human sexuality". Good stock comment. I'm sure no other person in the porn industry has ever used that line. Chong was also obsessed with tired notion that female sexuality is a socially bastardized concept. She also considers her porn to be a form of "art". Obviously, she's delusional.

Like I mentioned, "Sex: The Annabel Chong Story" is, overall, a nice look at the inner workings of the porn industry. After Chong's 251 cock gang-bang, she was refused payment of the negotiated ten thousand dollars of which she claimed wasn't the point of her record setting sex session. Clearly, honesty or loyalty within the porn business is not a primary concern, yet teenage runaways with no attributes other than ample pussies flock to Hollywood to make these fat miscreants more wealthy.

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