Jason
Jamie Gillis
Jason

A millionaire begins a sadomasochistic relationship with a naive young woman.
Jason
Jamie Gillis
Jason
Joanna
Terri Hall
Joanna
Griffin
Zebedy Colt
Griffin
Gena
Juliet Graham
Gena
Dancer
Steve Lark
Dancer
The Men (as John Busche)
John Bush
The Men (as John Busche)
The Men (as John Koven)
Bob Stevens
The Men (as John Koven)
The Men
Roy Carlton
The Men
First Guy Served at Bar (uncredited)
Gerard Damiano
First Guy Served at Bar (uncredited)
**The captivity of the will** At the height of the so-called "Golden Age" of adult cinema, Gerard Damiano conceived "The Story of Joanna" as a dark and stylized reinterpretation of the "Story of O" myth, for which he was unable to obtain permission to adapt, and from which he therefore extracted a highly personalized version. The plot follows Joanna, a woman immersed in existential weariness who seeks to transcend her reality through absolute surrender. Her path crosses with that of Jason, a decadent and austere aristocrat suffering from an undisclosed terminal illness. But Jason seeks not mere carnal pleasure, but the annihilation of Joanna's ego. Through a rigorous process of ritual degradation and discipline, Joanna is led to a secluded castle where her identity dissolves in favor of mystical obedience. The film thus chronicles a voluntary capitulation of the soul to a master who sees death as the only possible end to his final act of domination. If “Deep Throat” (1972) was the most commercially successful, and “The Devil in Miss Jones” (1973) a more psychological study, “The Story of Joanna” is undoubtedly Gerard Damiano’s most purely aesthetic and poetic work and, possibly, one of the best adult films ever made. Damiano departs from the genre’s conventional narrative to delve into the realm of gothic symbolism and the most cruel BDSM. In one of her first appearances in adult films, Terri Hall brings a moving sincerity to the role of Joanna, despite some of the dialogue being quite uncomfortable at times. A former dancer with the Stuttgart Ballet, Hall also performs a sensational six-minute classical choreography, a true conceptual transgression in this adult context.
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