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Color Climax Corporation ApS (CCC) is a defunct Danish pornography producer headquartered in Copenhagen.It was founded in 1967 [3] by the Theander brothers [4] and began with the publication of the porn magazine ColorClimax, despite pornography being illegal in Denmark until 1969. [5]
Another Danish film company, Palladium, made a similar series called the Bedside-films, also starring Ole Søltoft. The Zodiac-films were to some extent a sexually more explicit copy of the Bedside-films. The first Danish sex comedies were made in the 1960s, but Ole Ege's Bordellet (1972) was the first to have hardcore sex-scenes. [1]
In Portugal, hardcore pornographic movies can only be shown in adult cinemas. Videos and magazines are openly sold in newsstands but are forbidden by law to be supplied to minors under the age of 18 years. Additionally, hardcore pornographic movies are banned from open-channel TV and can only be broadcast through encrypted/pay-per-view channels.
The haunting scene at Saturday’s UEFA EURO 2020 match between Denmark and Finland will not soon be forgotten. In the midst of such horrific circumstances, the fans in attendance couldn’t help ...
Royal festivities will kick off midday in Denmark on 14 January, around 7.30am ET. There will be no television broadcast of the events, but many news outlets will be reporting live throughout the day.
Eighth and final film in the Danish Bedside-series of erotic mainstream-comedies, directed by John Hilbard and one of the two to have hardcore scenes, including extensive clips from the short Color Climax #1283: Mail Order Sex (1973), watched on 8mm by the ship's crew. [19] Danish I Løvens tegn (In the Sign of the Lion)
I have heard from now defunct dutch video dealers, that CCC sold all of the cp movies in late 79 to the Netherlands, the oncoming new laws were also discussed in the press. In NL, it was still legal - it was banned as late as 1985/86. And dutch dealers sold it back via mail to danish "customers".
Danish filmmaking remains influenced by the state through the Danish Film Institute (DFI), which was founded in 1972. DFI is Denmark's national agency for film and cinema culture, operating under the Ministry of Culture. DFI supports the development, production and distribution of films and run the national archives.