Eroticide

September. 28,2013      
Rating:
5.5
Trailer Synopsis Cast

EROTICIDE tells the story of a young man named Yan (Jocelin Haas) and how his addiction to erotic humiliation sets the course of his life on a downward spiral when his ex, Kendra (Lisa Di Capa) comes back into the picture, forcing him to choose between a future with his loving girlfriend, Elise (Stephanie van Rijn) or one of empty sexual gratification with Kendra.

Similar titles

Tropical Ecstasy
Tropical Ecstasy
A woman who makes her living as a prostitute must decide her fate between two totally different men.
Tropical Ecstasy 1970
Naked Ambition 3D
Naked Ambition 3D
An honors graduate in literature, Wyman is stuck writing cheap erotic fiction, but somehow ends up starring in an AV film. Suddenly a porn superstar in Japan, he discovers a whole new world fraught with pleasure, pain and more twists and turns than he or the audience expects.
Naked Ambition 3D 2015
Sexandroïde
Sexandroïde
Welcome to the temple of fear and eroticism, as a monstrous madman slowly mutilates poor young girls! See the sensual act of voodoo performed on an innocent bar patron! View the lustful bite of a vampire!
Sexandroïde 1987
Six Swedish Girls in Alps
Six Swedish Girls in Alps
This comedy has everyone's favorite 6 Swedish gals enjoying their stay in the alps. When the girls aren't enjoying the pleasure of their own company they're out having a good time with nearly everyone else in town.
Six Swedish Girls in Alps 1983
The Sex Adventures of the Three Musketeers
The Sex Adventures of the Three Musketeers
An "adults only" retelling of the legend of the Three Musketeers.
The Sex Adventures of the Three Musketeers 1971
Crash
Crash
After getting into a serious car accident, a TV director discovers an underground sub-culture of scarred, omnisexual car-crash victims who use car accidents and the raw sexual energy they produce to try to rejuvenate his sex life with his wife.
Crash 1997
Death Will Have Your Eyes
Death Will Have Your Eyes
A young woman who comes to Rome and soon drifts into de facto prostitution in order to survive. She meets a misanthropic doctor and would-be poet, but soon falls in love with another man. Murder ensues and she soon finds herself being blackmailed, sexually and financially, by her husband's shady driver, who saw something he shouldn't have.
Death Will Have Your Eyes 1974

Reviews

AniInterview
2013/09/28

Sorry, this movie sucks

... more
Stellead
2013/09/29

Don't listen to the Hype. It's awful

... more
Contentar
2013/09/30

Best movie of this year hands down!

... more
Billy Ollie
2013/10/01

Through painfully honest and emotional moments, the movie becomes irresistibly relatable

... more
E. Lx (butterman_1999)
2013/10/02

*** POSSIBLE SPOILERS AHEAD *** Part 1 of 2 (word limitations)Perhaps one of the greatest things about shooting an independent film when you are a writer and director is how the chances that your vision gets butchered or adapted to suit the needs of other outside investors or commercial appeal is extremely limited. Granted, one is always limited when shooting an independent feature, but in most cases, one actually manages to get the basic ideas out there regardless of financial limitations. Perhaps what makes the success of Mathew Saliba's own "post-retirement" film "Eroticide" is exactly that; it suffers of absolutely no major changes from his original idea, save for a few minor production details which do not affect either story nor character development in any way. And that is the driving essence of the film, its uncompromised and un-flattering look into the depth of human psyche, centered around three sides, or portraits of different forms of addiction. However do not let this fool you into thinking this is another re-hashed approached at looking through the eyes of bonged-out post grunge needle loving thrill seekers; "Eroticide" in facts explores facets often left either neglected or barely grazed upon of other forms of addiction, far from that of illicit sensory and mind altering formats. I would also venture by saying this film presents its points in brutal honesty without falling into any trappings set forth by the conventions usually associated with the genre."Eroticide" is, and always was about three characters and how their lives intertwine one fateful moment which will change their existence forever. Perhaps often a "predictable" formulae for indie films, Mathew Saliba manages to flesh out characters which are both realistic and profoundly vibrant in their sensibilities . His script always was something which I felt dangerously too close to, and when I had the privilege of assisting in a chunk of the casting of the film, I felt as though I almost understood why it was important for the characters to "be" and exist in the world of Saliba's creation. In terms of performance, the only way one could ever offer any form of criticism would be from a personal point of view, for example if the director himself thought one actor did not inhabit the character perfectly the way he had envisioned it in his script, which makes it both fruitless and extremely selfish for anyone else to even dare attempt any form of criticism, although I must admit that being a stickler for characters and details, I had my doubts. The strongest doubt I had was with lead Joselin Haas, but his portrayal of Yan was, to put it in such simple terms, spot on. Never missing a beat, existing only as the character during every single frame on-screen, Haas has managed to become the character of Yan in a way that is both hypnotic and mesmerizing. A very difficult role to pull off, done so with incredible credibility. Similarly to Haas, Stephanie Van Rijn plays the sensitive Elise, counterpart of Yan, with an equal, although completely different determination. Perhaps one of the most difficult roles to portray in the film, Stephanie manages to make every single emotional turn the character of Elise takes feel nothing short but real, and in the moment. Her brilliant mastery of the subtle complexities of the character is something worth enjoying time and again as nothing she does in the film is easy, even though as a mere voyeur of the piece, one would take it all for granted and never realize just how much effort she puts into her performance, just as much as Jocelin. Together, the increasingly distorted-fusion of their couple on screen reads the stuff of every film maker's fantasy: believable character living real emotion and evolving throughout the events. Just when things could not get any more interesting, the character of Kendra enters the fold to both spice things up and disturb the sh1t soup, so to speak. Portrayed with nothing short but absolutely mesmerizing gusto by Lisa Di Capa, Kendra is not as much the Vader to Jocelin and Stephanie's Luke and Leia, but more in the vein of Palpatine. The delicious and indescribable pleasures of portraying the quintessential "bad guy" (or in this case, the evil b1tch!) in a movie is a fantasy most actors dream about, but the line between credibility and ridiculous is a thin one, a challenge which is by no means any small feat for the powerful and talented Di Capa who's consistent body of work speaks for itself. Either the most difficult character to flesh out or perhaps just a stretch of reality, Kendra ends up becoming more human on screen than in script form, thanks to the carefully detailed performance by Di Capa who shines just as bright on screen as her co-stars, all the while not simply revealing the dark side of the story, but that which inhabits the characters themselves, and in the end, within us all.

... more