Evil Angel (studio)

Evil Angel
Private
Industry Filmmaking
Founded 1989
Headquarters 14141 Covello Street 8C, Van Nuys, Los Angeles, California 91405, United States
Area served
Worldwide
Key people
John Stagliano (owner)
Products Pornographic films, Pornographic magazines
Services video on demand
Owner John Stagliano
Website www.evilangel.com

Evil Angel is an American production company and distributor of pornographic films, founded and owned by John Stagliano.

Stagliano and Evil Angel pioneered the Gonzo pornography genre in the late 1980s.[1][2] Several of the most acclaimed pornographic film directors have worked for Evil Angel, and its films have won numerous awards.[3][4]

It has been described as "the top porn-film producer" in the U.S,[5] as one of the handful of companies which dominate the distribution of hardcore pornographic films in the U.S.,[6] and as one of the most profitable porn studios.[7][8]

History

Evil Angel owner John Stagliano.

Background and beginnings

The company's rise to prominence was fueled by the industry switch from film to videotape. In the late 1970s a feature-length porn film shot on celluloid might have cost as much as $350,000.[9] In 1983 the VCR had been recently introduced, and producers were beginning to make pornographic films on videotape. A film using video could be made for as little as $5,000, compared to a minimum of $40,000 for a movie shot on film. Into the 1990s, by shooting its productions with video cameras, Evil Angel could still make films for $8,000.[9] Stagliano initially had little knowledge of film making, but he made his first movie for $8,000 in 1983: Bouncing Buns, starring Stacy Donovan. For the next six years he made films for other companies to manufacture and distribute.[10]

In 1989 he started Evil Angel, to sell his own films. The origin of the company's name goes back to when Stagliano was working as a stripper: "There was another guy in one of my shows named John. So this MC started calling me Evil John to differentiate us. This was when I was doing Dracula and chains. At the same time I had a girlfriend who called herself Angel when she did strip shows. She was a very nasty girl and I suggested that she call herself Evil Angel. She didn't, but I loved the name and wound up using it for my company."[10]

Buttman and Gonzo

The first Evil Angel film was Dance Fire, filmed in 1988 by Stagliano, starring himself, Trinity Loren, Brandy Alexandre and others. It would only be released on DVD 20 years later.[11] Influenced by amateur pornography, In 1989 Stagliano hit on the idea of performing in a film whilst also operating the camera, so that the viewer experiences the film through the eyes of his character. The first-person perspective was influenced by the 1960s film Blowup.[12] At the time this was in contrast to the majority of porn, which tended not to make viewers aware of the camera.[13] This technique is today known as Point of view pornography. He formed his Buttman persona, and shot Adventures of Buttman.[14] The early Buttman films were written, produced, directed, edited, shot and manufactured personally by Stagliano.[15] The first two Buttman films had lengthy scripts, but the series soon evolved into an improvised, spontaneous format. In contrast to his earlier work and the standard porn of the time, Stagliano did not link each scene together to form a conventional narrative. At times the camerawork was shaky.[13] Partly due to his lack of funds, he didn't use elaborate sets or locations. At the time porn films had a traditional storyline, with sex scenes interspersed with dialogue by performers with little acting ability. Instead of that format, Stagliano chose to film "one sex scene which has a beginning, a middle and ends at a climax. Trying to make all that relate to a bigger story is very difficult and creates all sorts of problems that get in the way of making the best scene possible."[10] The distinct style of the early Evil Angel films would be widely imitated, and would come to be known as Gonzo pornography.[16][15]

Success

In the 1990s Stagliano became one of the most successful figures in the American pornographic film industry.[17] In 1990 Patrick Collins and Stagliano founded the Elegant Angel label as a subsidiary of Evil Angel.[2][18] In 1991 Stagliano established a production subsidiary in São Paulo, Brazil.[19] By 1993 the company was producing a new videotape every three weeks, and was grossing more than $1 million a year;[20] in 1996 it sold approximately half a million videos.[8] In the mid-'90s the company started using the phrase "The Evil Empire" on its box-covers, in reference to its growing stable of directors.[4] In 1996 Collins established Elegant Angel as a separate company, and in 1998 it ended all cooperation with Evil Angel.[2][21] His departure from Evil Angel has been called "less than amicable", and he and Stagliano are apparently "ex-friend[s]".[21] At the time Collins said that Stagliano "couldn't run a business, and would fail without him".[21] According to Stagliano, "Patrick's a bully . . . he wasn't doing his job properly . . . I should have fired him years ago".[21]

A 1997 U.S. News and World Report investigation identified Evil Angel as the most profitable pornographic studio.[8] In 2007 the studio received 127 AVN Award nominations in 60 categories, making it the fourth year in a row in which it received more than 100 nominations.[22] In 2008 EA won 18 AVN awards. Stagliano won the 'Best Director - Video' award for Fashionistas Safado: Berlin.[23]

Legal issues

In August 2007, Evil Angel and Jules Jordan prevailed in a DVD piracy case against Kaytel Video Distribution and several other defendants, winning a total of over $17.5 million, which was the largest sum ever awarded in an adult piracy case.[24] Evil were awarded $11.2 million, and Jordan $5.3 million. EA had originally filed the lawsuit in November 2005.[25]

On April 8, 2008, Evil Angel and its owner, John Stagliano were indicted on Federal obscenity charges by a federal grand jury in Washington, D.C.[26][27] Films named in the obscenity charges included Storm Squirters 2 by Joey Silvera, Milk Nymphos by Jay Sin, and a trailer for Belladonna: Fetish Fanatic 5.[26][28] Stagliano and Evil Angel were represented by Al Gelbard, who successfully defended JM Productions owner Jeff Steward in a 2007 obscenity case.[26] The company released a compilation DVD entitled Defend Our Porn, with proceeds going towards its legal defense fund, and set up the DefendOurPorn.org website to provide information on the legal proceedings.[28]

In December 2008 the BBC reported that Stagliano and Evil Angel were a client of UK lawyers Davenport Lyons who were seeking financial redress from people they asserted had downloaded copyright material using Peer to Peer software.[29]

Directors and Films

The company differs from most other porn studios in that it contracts with in-house directors and permits them to own the films that they create, while Evil Angel handles the film's manufacture, distribution, promotion and sales and takes a percentage of the gross sales.[30][31] Each director has his own particular style and is a star in his own right, with his own brand identity.[32] Stagliano adopted this business model due to his previous experience selling his videos to other companies. He found it difficult to establish his reputation when someone else owned his content, and he didn't receive any more money if a film sold well.[33]

The company's roster of directors currently consists of Stagliano, John Leslie, Rocco Siffredi, Joey Silvera, Christoph Clark, Nacho Vidal, Jonni Darkko, Jake Malone, Jay Sin, Jazz Duro, Manuel Ferrara, Lexington Steele, Mike Adriano, Steve Holmes, Uncle D and Belladonna.[31][34][35][36][37][38] Previous directors include Gregory Dark, Jules Jordan, Bruce Seven, Bionca, Alex de Renzy and Erik Everhard.[4]

Former directors

Gregory Dark left VCA over "creative differences" in the summer of 1995 and launched his own film company, Dark Works, with Evil Angel Video handling all distribution.[39] His first film for Evil Angel was Sex Freaks, starring Stephanie Swift, Nyrobi Knights, Lovette and Tom Byron.[40] He also worked on Snake Pit and The Best Of Gregory Dark.[41] Dark has since stopped directing for the studio.

Jules Jordan formerly directed for Evil Angel, producing series including Ass Worship.[28] In 2006 he left to form his own company, Jules Jordan Video.[42]

Erik Everhard also formerly worked with the company, after directing for Anabolic Video, Diabolic Video and Red Light District Video.[43][44] He left Red Light District in 2005 to join Evil Angel, before joining Jules Jordan Video.[45]

Current directors

Stagliano has directed several film series for the studio. By 2003 almost 30 films in the Buttman series had been produced, some of them shot in locations including New Zealand, Prague (Czech Republic), San Diego and London.[15] The premise of most of the films is Stagliano approaching a woman and persuading her to show him her buttocks, followed by her having sex. The films blurred the boundary between what was a pre-arranged set-up and what was real.[46] It has also been turned into a comic-book.[47]

John Leslie had a successful career as an actor, then began directing for VCA Pictures in the mid-'80s. The first film he directed for Evil Angel was The Dog Walker in 1994, after its script had been rejected by VCA.[34] Rocco Siffredi began working as a director for the company in 1994.

Joey Silvera started directing for Evil Angel in 1995. Previously he had been an actor, then directed for Devil's Film in the early 1990s. Christoph Clark joined the company in 1997. His first film was Euro Angels. Nacho Vidal joined the studio in late 2001. Jonni Darkko first directed for New Sensations. In 2004 he formed Darkko Productions and joined Evil Angel.

Manuel Ferrara released his first Evil Angel film in May 2006, after working for Red Light District Video for two years.[48] He was originally a protégé of Rocco Siffredi, and had an award-winning acting career, including an appearance in Stagliano’s Fashionistas. Jake Malone signed an exclusive distribution deal in June 2006.[44]

Belladonna was first introduced to Stagliano by her then-boyfriend Nacho Vidal. Evil Angel is the exclusive distributor of titles under the Belladonna Entertainment and Deadly Nightshade Productions labels. Jay Sin started directing for Buttman Magazine Choice in early 2007, working on films including Milk Nymphos 2, then became an EA director in January 2008.[49]

Sin is known for his extreme anal pornography, more recently including rectal prolapse in some of his videos.[50] Many of his videos also feature women inserting objects such as oranges and baseballs into their rectums, then pushing the objects back out. Sin calls his films "artistic" and states that porn for him is "a way of life"[51]

Evil Angel Publishing

Evil Angel Publishing is the magazine division of Evil Angel. In March 2007 it launched Extra Parts, a 100-page publication featuring pictures from director Joey Silvera’s transgendered women movies.[52]

Awards

The following is a selection of some of the major awards Evil Angel films have won:

References

  1. "ELEGANT ANGEL". AVN. Archived from the original on May 4, 2009. Retrieved 2009-04-11.
  2. 1 2 3 Hunter, Tod (2007-08-10). "Elegant Angel". XBIZ. Retrieved 2009-04-11.
  3. Billboard. Nielsen Business Media. 3 Feb 2007. p. 22.
  4. 1 2 3 Petkovich, p.10
  5. Breck, John (1999). The sacred gift of life: Orthodox Christianity and bioethics. St Vladimir's Seminary Press. p. 102. ISBN 0-88141-183-3.
  6. Kick, Russ (2005). Everything You Know about Sex Is Wrong: The Disinformation Guide to the Extremes of Human Sexuality (and Everything in Between). Disinformation Company. p. 145. ISBN 1-932857-17-6.
  7. Joseph W. Slade. Pornography in the Late Nineties. Wide Angle, Volume 19, Number 3, July 1997.
  8. 1 2 3 Eric Schlosser, "The Business of Pornography," U.S. News and World Report, February 10, 1997.
  9. 1 2 McNair, Brian (2002). Striptease culture: sex, media and the democratization of desire. Routledge. p. 39. ISBN 0-415-23734-3.
  10. 1 2 3 "JOHN STAGLIANO". evilangel.com. Archived from the original on January 2, 2010. Retrieved 2009-04-17.
  11. Steve Javors (2008-02-14). "Evil Angel Releases First-Ever Video on DVD". XBIZ. Retrieved 2009-04-17.
  12. O'Toole, Kerekes p.17
  13. 1 2 O'Toole, Kerekes p.16
  14. Petkovich, Anthony (2002). The X Factory: Inside the American Hardcore Film Industry. Critical Vision. p. 10. ISBN 1-900486-24-5.
  15. 1 2 3 O'Toole, Kerekes p.7
  16. Weasels, P. "The Quick and Dirty Guide to Gonzo". GameLink.com. Retrieved 2008-08-22.
  17. O'Toole, Laurence; Kerekes, David (2003). Headpress: Powered by Love. Headpress. p. 5. ISBN 1-900486-22-9.
  18. Kandyba, Slav (2004-04-26). "Product backlog to see porn firms through hiatus.". San Fernando Valley Business Journal. Retrieved 2009-04-11.
  19. Sigel, Lisa Z. (2005). International exposure: perspectives on modern European pornography, 1800-2000. Rutgers University Press. p. 178. ISBN 0-8135-3519-0.
  20. "Despite U.S. Campaign, a Boom in Pornography". New York Times. 1993-07-04. Retrieved 2009-04-18.
  21. 1 2 3 4 O'Toole, Kerekes p.30
  22. Joanne Cachapero (2007-12-06). "Evil Angel Nabs 127 Award Nominations". XBIZ. Retrieved 2009-04-17.
  23. Mike Weatherford (2008-01-18). "SHOW REVIEW: "Fashionistas"". Las Vegas Review Journal. Retrieved 2009-04-18.
  24. Evil Angel, Jules Jordan Win Over $16.6 Million In DVD Piracy Case, Adult Video News, posted August 10, 2007.
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  34. 1 2 Joseph W. Slade. Flesh Need Not be Mute: The Pornographic Videos of John Leslie. Wide Angle, Volume 19, Number 3, July 1997.
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  36. "Evil Angel's Raul Cristian Receives Venus Award". XBIZ. 2008-10-23. Retrieved 2009-04-17.
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  40. Petkovich, p.13
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  43. "Erik Everhard's Biography". Retrieved 2008-08-23.
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  45. Steve Javors. "Jury Awards Erik Everhard $141K in Red Light District Case". XBIZ.
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  52. Steve Javors (2007-12-21). "Evil Angel Publishing Announces New Magazine". XBIZ. Retrieved 2009-04-17.
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  65. XBIZ Award Winners, XBIZ, January, 2016

External links

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