Television is rapidly changing, the days of Lucy and Desi Arnaz
sleeping in separate beds is long behind us, but with networks like
HBO, AMC, Cinemax and
Showtime doing their best to grind
NBC, ABC, and
CBC
into the dust with a slew of adult oriented content that change seems
to be speeding up, and I for one couldn’t be happier. There will always
be a place for the latest sitcom, or whatever incarnation of
C.S.I. is currently airing, but it’s on premium cable stations that new ground is being broken;
Game of Thrones is a mega-hit for
HBO while
Showtime had its long running serial killer show
Dexter, and with this new series
Submission creators
Jacky St. James and
Paul Fishbein try and push the envelope just a little further.
Co-creator Jacky St. James, a well-known writer/director of pornographic movies, saw the hype surrounding the book and movie
Fifty Shades of Grey and was rather put out by it, to her that was not a proper depiction of the BDSM lifestyle, citing that it "
Passed off an abusive relationship as an honest interpretation of the BDSM lifestyle.”
So with this Showtime series she hopes to inform and educate people on
what is a healthy and consensual relationship in the world of bondage
and submission, and will deal with realistic portrayals of such people.
The series central character is Ashley Pendleton (
Ashlynn Yennie),
a young woman who escapes a terrible relationship, one whose poor sex
abilities was about to put her in a sleep induced coma, and to the
darker side of sexuality. Ashley is the audience identification figure,
but unlike say Anastasia Steele in
Fifty Shades of Grey, she’s actually heard of a butt plug.
Though it’s possible her ex-boyfriend never has.
After a nasty scene with her ex Ashley takes up her best friend Jules (
Victoria Levine)
offer to share her place in the small town of Ivy; it seems like a
quaint place but then she is a bit taken aback when on her first day she
witnesses the owner of the local coffee shop having sex in the backroom
of his establishment. Raif (
Kevin Nelson),
the coffee shop owner, offers Ashley a job, and which she gladly takes
because this is clearly a place with a great working environment. It’s
when she meets Dylan (
Raylin Joy),
who is to be one of her roommates with Jules, that things get a bit
tense because it turns out that Dyan is the selfsame woman that Ashley
saw Raif screwing earlier. Dylan is free spirited sexual dynamo whose
kinky side is far beyond just having sex in public places (
Note:
She’s not limited to men as she seduces one oblivious dude’s girlfriend
into a lesbian tryst in the coffee shop bathroom), but her real paying
gig is procuring girls who will sexually submit to the mysterious Elliot
(
Justin Berti).
Kind of a “personal shopper” for the kinky inclined.
Things get interesting when Ashley comes across the book “
Slave”
by local erotic fiction author Nolan Keats that Dylan left lying out.
The sexual submission of the books protagonist lights a fire inside
Ashley, sparking her into masturbatory fantasies, and she becomes
obsessed with finding out who this reclusive author is.
Did I mention that her friend Jules is having a lesbian affair with her married boss Scarlet (
Nika Khitrova)? So far I’ve probably given you the impression that Jacky St. James’s
Submission
is full of sex and nothing else, which is what one could expect from a
series about sexual submission, but there is a lot more going on here;
I’d say this show is kind of a cross between
Sex & the City and
The Story of O.
The biggest hurdle the show has is putting in the seemingly required
three sex scenes into each thirty minute episode. Something is going to
suffer.
Suffer, but not in a good way.
The
men of the show are pretty much two dimensional caricatures, making
them fairly uninteresting, as most of the screen time not spent on sex
focuses on the women and their needs and desires; this is not
necessarily a bad thing but a little balance could help make the show
connect with a wider audience. For me the stand out character in the
series isn’t protagonist Ashley Pendleton but the much more complicated
Dylan, played beautifully by Raylin Joy, who some will know by her adult
star nom de plume Skin Diamond. Dylan’s relationship with Elliot, and
the tense dynamic between her and the somewhat naïve Ashley, is what
makes this show work; that Raylin is an award winning porn stars should
not overshadow that fact at just how good she is in this; her earlier
college training and love of Shakespeare and Ancient Greek Theater
clearly shows through. Dylan's character arc through the first season is
by far the more interesting one.
And her skills as a sex performer are of course unparalleled.
Is
Submission
pornography or erotica? This is a question I’m sure some people will
ask and as the sex on screen are fairly graphic, no penetration seen but
almost everything else is, it’s a fair question. As mentioned before
writer director Jacky St. James has kind of a mission statement with
this series, not something you’d get in an average porn movie, and the
show is not populated solely by porn stars trying to branch out. Lead
actress Ashlynn Yennie has been on everything from
True Blood to
NCIS,
but though a “legitimate” actor she doesn’t shy away from the intense
sexual scenes depicted in this show, and though I can’t say that all the
actresses/actors give stellar performances I’d like to point out that
I’ve seen a lot worse on higher profile shows.
There’s just a lot of nudity here, thus a bit more distracting.
What
is unclear is if we will ever see a second season; though ratings did
improve over the six episode run they were certainly not of note to
guarantee a return engagement, and that is a shame. Jacky St. James has
managed to produce a quality show giving an honest glimpse into a world
that many people look at with either mild curiosity or disgust, but I
found the honesty of this show refreshing, and more on point than
anything you got in an episode of
Sex and the City. Whether
Submission
returns for another season or not it should at least be known that once
upon a time there was an incredibly hot show, steaming hot at times,
that gave us a nice collection of characters, full of both flaws and
good heart, which challenged late night television.
Note: This is certainly not a show for the prudish at heart.
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