Pay Pig | Dark Comedy Short Film about a Dominatrix and Sub

Pay Pig | Dark Comedy Short Film about a Dominatrix and Sub

Turn Off Light
Auto Next
More
Add To Playlist Watch Later
Report

Report


Reviews

0 %

User Score

0 ratings
Rate This

Descriptions:

Blane, a small town bodybuilder and personal trainer, engages in a modern, online fetish with his dominatrix Lexi known as “financial domination.” This fetish consists of men-often referred to as “Pay Pigs”- who simply send money and fancy gifts to their dom online.

A selection of Short of the Week, the web’s leading curators of quality short films.

SUBMIT A FILM: https://www.shortoftheweek.com/submit/
FULL REVIEW: https://www.shortoftheweek.com/2019/02/08/pay-pig/

Subscribe to S/W on YouTube!
Website: http://www.shortoftheweek.com
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/ShortoftheWeek
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/shortoftheweek
Twitter: https://twitter.com/shortoftheweek

“The internet certainly didn’t spawn the idea of transactional sex work, but it sure as hell streamlined it. If you can think of a fetish, you can damn well be sure there is a marketplace for it with a queue of willing customers. Director Hunt Beaty (a S/W alum for last year’s The Sound of Your Voice), along with his small team of talented collaborators (JosΓ© AndrΓ©s Cardona, Wesley Wingo) of Six Short Films, returns to the site with this interesting dissection of character and societyβ€”a look at the sub-culture of Pay Pigs, men who get their sexual kicks via transactional donations to an all-powering dominatrix.

It’s a lurid, inherently fascinating subjectβ€”the kind of thing that taps into our innate, primal interest in all things sexual, backed by the socio-economic baggage of a capitalistic infrastructure. Paying for sex isn’t new, but technology and consumerism have changed the game. A film like this could have easily gotten weighed down by the cornucopia of topics its addressing…sex, money, power, gender roles…it’s almost too much for a ten minute short to contain. But, Beaty, wisely, keeps the focus on these two characters and the odd power dynamic between them. He takes what could have been a didactic think-piece, and makes it a compelling character study. After all, it’s counter-intuitive that a big, strong β€œmanly man” like Blane would enjoy being emasculated. Likewise, is Lexi just a craven, evil capitalist? Or, is she some sort of pioneerβ€”a feminist who has broken through the glass ceiling to manipulate the type of man who would typically be the oppressor? Or, moreover, is she her own kind of slave, dependent on the gig economy to survive?

The film doesn’t provide clear answers, but it presents such a complex conceptual stew that it’s all so damn entertaining to ponder. Moreover, neither character is truly a villain. The film constantly seems to be adjusting our understanding of who the β€œvictim” is. I can’t tell if Blane is the more sympathetic character, or if I just think that because I’m bringing my own white male cisgender bias to the table.

Visually, Beaty keeps things interesting, harnessing an edit style that is engaging, with a clever implementation of β€œscreen-life” techniques. As our lives become more and more screen based, it’s interesting to see how filmmakers have translated this obsession into narrative cinema. The extreme example is something like last year’s thriller, Searching, which takes place entirely on a computer screen. But, Beaty finds a happy medium here, incorporating traditional narrative cinematography (the film was shot and edited with finesse by JosΓ© AndrΓ©s Cardona) and marries it with the dynamic, alert-based nature of our screen culture. The YouTube confessionals provide some nice insight into the outward appearance these characters are projecting.

If there is a complaint, it suffers from β€œfirst act” problemsβ€”the movie does that annoying short film thing of ending before having to figure out a true conclusion. But, to be fair, like most internet relationships, the eventual meeting IRL between these two players would have been disappointingβ€”it’s obviously not going to go well. And, so we get this terrific frame of Blaneβ€”the perfect male physiqueβ€”swallowed by the big city crowd. Another lost piggie in search of a master.” – S/W Curator Ivan Kander

Written & Directed by Hunt Beaty
Produced by Hunt Beaty, JosΓ© AndrΓ©s Cardona, Wesley Wingo
Co-Produced by Reed Adler
Associate Produced by Scott Herriott
Additional Writing by JosΓ© AndrΓ©s Cardona, Wesley Wingo

Blane: Rob Youells
Lexi: Francesca Anderson
Tim: Shah Sadozai
Credit Card Representative: Jason Katz
Pay Pigs: Fareed Ali, Sly Augustus, Michelangelo Del Rosario, David Ferino, Chad Jones, Alan Kelly, Wesley Wingo

Photographed & Edited by JosΓ© AndrΓ©s Cardona
Production Designer: Kendra Eaves
Crew Players: David Broad, Chris Barnes, Will Sabel Courtney, Alex Dorman, Evan Carter
Production Sound: Ashley Knowlton

Supervising Sound Editors: Tarcisio Longobardi, Theodore Robinson
Re-Recording Mixer: Cory Choy

Color Grading: Post Pro Gumbo
Colorist: Alan Louis Gordon
Visual Effects: Carl Brent Ferguson

Reproduced on this channel with the permission of the filmmakers.

Leave your comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *