Two god awful Pure Taboo segments are presented together on this DVD release, made in Hell.
In the title scene, Sarah Arabic is a plus-size gonzo performer, but her lack of acting ability sinks this typical Pure Taboo segment about coercive sex.
She plays a schoolteacher who's been put on leave after being accused of a lesbian affair with one of her students. Charles Dera plays the student's angry father who harangues Sarah for her misdeed and confronts her with the claim that he has incriminating photos of the couple's sex together.
She protests her innocence, but his claim is convincing when he tells her about the tattoo just above her pussy and other descriptions of her body. Lapis Afterglow's screenplay is remiss in implying that he's a phony, because he never shows her the photos, but that story angle is never resolved, just dropped along the way (as sex content is what matters here to the filmmakers).
Sarah bungles her lines in the set-up portion of the scene, and then steps completely out of character once Dera starts banging her (the price she must pay for him not to use the photos or testify against her). It's just gonzo time, with Sarah turning into the professional sex worker on cue.
Supporting vignette is titled "Where God Doesn't Look". It's sort of a euphemism for the expression: Where the sun don't shine. Take a terrible script (credited to Robby Revlon and director Seth Gamble) and add the overacting of Tommy Pistol as a corrupt priest and you have an unwatchable Pure Taboo episode. Even by the low standards of this "rough sex and fetish" series, this one is a reject.
Penelope Kay stars and narrates as a Catholic schoolgirl out for revenge, who targets priest Tommy Pistol. We have to sit through an overwritten, way too obvious sermon he recites, blaming modern technology (the cellphone is "the devil's mirror"), social media and of course, pornography for the low morality of today. He places special emphasis on how virginity is a "treasure", downplayed nowadays.
Penelope goes to his office purportedly to confess, but with a sexy voice begins grilling him on whether Mary and Joseph ever had sex. He replies with various religious claptrap and then her conversation gets more personal as she talks of classmates who claim that anal sex is an option for a girl to keep her virginity intact.
Listening to this lousy dialogue I felt like I was hearing that old debate about Clinton not having sex with Monica because it was just oral sex. At any rate, she manages to seduce Tommy, but they can only have oral and anal sex. After his money shot and they clean up his messy office, she angrily reveals her true motive for revenge against him.
Not only do both performers step completely out of character for their sex scene together, but Tommy's large, ugly tattoos and his overwrought performance as a priest (a role he's taken several times before) are disgusting. I suppose his out-of-shape, potbellied body is useful in turning the viewer against his character, but Seth Gamble can't have it both ways: he tries to turn on the porno viewer with sex while turning off that same viewer with Pistol on screen.