

Six people, one room, one night, one game, a lot of sensuality and much to discover. A Film that shows how bodies and minds might meet when allowed to. Get involved within a stimulating experiment, somewhere between aesthetic statement and real venture, between pornographic art and the attempt to reposition sexuality within dialogue and actions.
Direction
Brochhaus walks the tightrope between documentary and performance art.
Production
Minimalist set becomes its own character — claustrophobic and revealing.
Director
Maike Brochhaus
Trivia, insights & behind the scenes
Emerges from Germany's post-pornographic movement where filmmakers like Bruce La Bruce and others blurred lines between queer cinema and adult content. Brochhaus specifically wanted to 'reposition sexuality within dialogue' — a direct response to porn's usual silence.
The 72-minute runtime matches the actual event duration, suggesting unedited temporal reality that the film deliberately undermines through selective framing. What feels 'real' is as constructed as any narrative feature.