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In 1999, after her contract with Dorcel ended, she left the sex industry, and later entirely disavowed her adult film career. [9] She tried to reinvent herself as a singer, but without success. [10] In 2012, she sued her former music producer, who had also been her life partner, for rape and domestic abuse. [11]
Marc Dorcel (born in March 1934) is a French-Hungarian producer of adult erotic films who founded the company Video Marc Dorcel (or simply Marc Dorcel).Besides producing films by himself, he also produces films in partnership with people like Michel Ricaud, Cyril Randuineau, Marc Ange and Julo Kaiel.
Caballero Home Video (US) Cazzo Film (includes gay content) CineMagic (Japan) ClubJenna (US) Coat Corporation (includes gay content) Cobra Video (includes gay content) CockyBoys (includes gay content) Color Climax Corporation (Denmark) Colt Studio Group (includes gay content) Corbin Fisher (includes gay content) Cross (Japan) (defunct) Crystal ...
The awards have been described as the porn equivalent of the Palme d'Or [5] or the Academy Awards. [3] [7] [8] The analogous American honor is the AVN Award.[2] [8] [9] The inaugural event was held over two weeks in May in a hotel complex, at exactly the same time as the Cannes Film Festival.
In July 2008, Tran released My Fucking Life, a French-language film made for Marc Dorcel Studios. The movie is partly a documentary on Tran's daily life over a year, with a look at her shoots in Las Vegas, on set during filming in Porn Valley, along with a bit of her personal life. [21]
In 2007, she signed an exclusive contract with the producer Marc Dorcel. [1] [4] [5] [6] That same year, she had a significant role in Danielle Arbid's film drama A Lost Man, which premiered at the 60th Cannes Film Festival. [1] [7] [8] In 2008, she had a supporting role in Olivier Marchal's crime drama MR 73.
From 2002 to 2003, Coste worked as an exclusive contract performer for Marc Dorcel productions, who had been looking for an equivalent to Clara Morgane. [3] With Dorcel, she starred L'affaire Katsumi (2002) and Une nuit au bordel (2002). After leaving Dorcel, she worked with Fred Coppula.
Due to containing what was deemed "gratuitous sexual violence" the film was repeatedly denied release in Australia throughout the 1980s. [1]Ben Sachs of the Chicago Reader stated "There's not much love in this 1975 grindhouse item, an unlikely marriage of vigilante movies and hardcore porn, but two out of three ain't bad" and "This is an authentically decrepit vision of immorality, and ...