Barracks (1975), scene from Sextool
Director: Fred Halsted – starring Val Martin, Jim Miller, T. Rhodes, and B. Dick (Dick Trask)
pornoclips
Barracks (1975), scene from Sextool
Director: Fred Halsted – starring Val Martin, Jim Miller, T. Rhodes, and B. Dick (Dick Trask)
director: Francis Ellie (1979)
Starring: George Payne & Jack Wrangler; plus Brian Ray (Santa); , Giuseppe Welsh (helicopter), Adam DeHaven, Kurt Mann, Snapper Foster, Derek Thurston, and Anna Freed
Another rerun, another clip from Navy Blue – but it’s just soooooo good! Classic story – two guys in the Navy on a 12-hour leave in NYC, each secretly in love with the other, but can’t bare to admit it to the other and risk jeopardizing their friendship. They part ways, and Jack Wrangler is trying to enjoy site-seeing on his own, but loses himself in thought looking at one of the Christmas-decorated windows, imagining a romantic encounter with his buddy, 70’s bearded hunk George Payne, complete with disco-theme music, of course. (BTW, the music is SPACE’s Magic Fly). Remember guys, this is also the film with the wonderful blowjob in the helicopter flying over Manhattan skyline scene.


One of the last great porn films, opening with monks in robes carrying Gayracula’s coffin, and Tim Kramer turning into a bat and flying away just before the monks are able to put a stake through his heart! Part of the action takes place in 1783, with Kramer having sweaty sex with Steve Collins (as the Marquis de Suede); but, afterwards, Kramer notices something on his neck that isn’t quite a hickey! Then in present day Los Angeles (1983), they meet up again. Purposely corny, it’s a fun film that actually has some great sex in it. (Meaning, invite your friends over to watch, have some laughs, then kick them out and re-watch the cum-slurping good parts again!)
Director: Roger Earl (1983)
Starring: Tim Kramer, Steve Collins (as the Marquis de Suede), Michael Christopher, Rand Remington, Randal Butler, Ray Medina (AKA J. W. Stone, Julio Campas), Max Cooper (aka Max Montoya), Doug Weston, Douglas Boston, David McNeil
director: Wakefield Poole (1974) Casey Donovan, Val Martin (in this scene from Moving!)
“CASEY DONOVAN is house hunting in Hollywood. But instead of a house, this sex superstar finds the kind of huge, muscular stud that makes CASEY pull out all the stops in twenty minutes of boiling sex you’ll have to see to believe. You’ll want to be there when CASEY goes all the way.”
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Hot Rods (1987)
Kevin Williams falls asleep in his car as the mechanics work on his car, and dreams a leather scene as he bottoms for John Davenport, J.T. Denver, Rex and others (not sure which of these others from the rest of the video are in this scene – Mike Henson, Kevin Williams, Alan Fox, Jeff Quinn, Jason Lowe, John Davenport, Eric Radford, J.T. Denver, Rocky Armano, Kevin Wiles, Vinnie Marino)
Starring: Mike Henson, Kevin Williams, Alan Fox, Jeff Quinn, Jason Lowe, John Davenport, Eric Radford, J.T. Denver, Rocky Armano, Kevin Wiles, Vinnie Marino
good review / overview of Hot Rods: Young & Hung 2 (1987)
Director: Ignatio Rutkowski (1972)
Starring: Peter Berlin (AKA Peter Burian), Rick Jedin, Tom Webb, Al Joffrey and Jeff Salem
This is Berlin’s first film – I actually think THAT BOY (1974), which he also produced, directed and wrote, is much better – but this is still a great little film showing bits of San Francisco gay life back in 1972. The party with a handful of drag queens is great, and the best, sexually speaking, is the final scene, where Berlin watches two lovers go at it, and joins in. (see below). I’d love to know the source of the music used in the preview above.
update/edit – Boysenberry Jam by MOBY GRAPE
Director: Roger Earl (1975) 78 minutes running time
Starring: Val Martin – Quave Dalton – Steve Richards – John Detour – Eric Lansing – Tiger John – David Andrews
I’ve seen the release date vary – 1972, 1975, 1977 – – even GEVI’s Born to Raise Hell page says 1972 – which I think is too early, especially if you see all the ads for it GEVI mentions are in 1975 and 1976 (including most of the reviews). Shit, even I have it wrong in a few places on the blog! I do know it was around the same time as Wakefield Poole‘s Moving! (1974) – – anyway – mid 70’s!