What Are Loops?
Before Deep Throat and Behind the Green Door introduced Porn Chic to an unsuspecting American public in 1972, there were loops. Loops were basically stag films that had been given a facelift. They usually lasted no more than 7-10 minutes and were made for peep-show machines - 8mm projectors closed in solid boxes in a small booth with a screen and a door that could be locked. The films were on constant rotation - hence the term loops. The huge demand for sex films to show in these booths helped establish the adult film industry in the late 1960s and early 1970s.
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| Early stag film |
The first public exhibition of projected motion pictures in America was at Koster and Bial’s Music Hall in New York City on 23 April 1896. That very same year the French filmmaker Albert Kirchner made the earliest known stag film, Le Coucher de la Mariée, which depicted the cabaret performer Louise Willy doing a striptease before taking a bath with an unknown male. The first hardcore stag film that can be dated with any certainty is A L'Ecu d'Or ou la bonne auberge. Shot in France in 1908, the plot depicts a soldier having sex with a servant girl at an inn.
In the 1960s, social and judicial attitudes towards the explicit depiction of sexuality began to change, while the pill allowed the hippy generation to experience “free love” without unwanted repercussions. Many people, such as early porn director Alex De Renzy, have argued that without the “free love” ethos of the flower-power generation and the availability of the pill, it would have been impossible for hardcore pornography to explode onto the mass market the way it did in the early 1970s.
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| Lasse Braun in 1969 |
From 1966 onwards he produced loops operating out of Denmark and later the Netherlands. He worked mainly with unknown women he met in bars, but also with established names, such as French porn actresses Claudine Beccarie and Sylvia Bourdon. His films were generally well-shot, often with interesting settings, costumes and themes such as the adventures of Casanova, or flimsy stories based on Vikings or spies. This was a long way from art, but it was definitely a step up from the existing cheaply made fuck-flicks shot in dirty basements!
“I make porn movies for two reasons: first of all because I’m fond of sex and secondly because it is forbidden.” - Lasse Braun
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| 1971 loop by Lasse Braun |
In the early days loops were silent. Later sound was introduced, but often they were dubbed to suit the market so it didn’t matter whether they were shot in France, Denmark, Germany or even the UK (where hardcore porn was still illegal at the time). Some of the many European labels in the late 1970s were Tabu, Teenage Climax, Love Film, Karl Ordinez, Color Climax, Rubin Film and Starlight.
In the USA production was split between New York, Los Angeles and San Francisco. New York turned out the M Series and the G Series. LA had the Pretty Girl and Playmate series. San Francisco had the 200 series, the OZ series, Collection series and Diamond Collection.
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| 8mm loops from the 1970s |
Many early porn stars like Tina Russell, Linda Lovelace, Brigitte Maier, Uschi Karnat, Linda McDowell, Patricia Rhomberg and Mary Millington first made their names in porn shooting loops. By the mid to late 1970s the adult film industry was well established in both the US and Europe, but it was still common to see future stars such as Leslie Bovee, Candida Royalle, Jean Jennings, Seka or Dorothy Le May launch their career through loops before moving on to feature films.
"There were loops and then there were features. Only the biggest stars got to do features. On the other hand there were a lot more loops being done than features, so lots of A’ list porn stars did loops in between features… We’d get paid for a day’s work and that was it.” – Seka
One of the last labels in the US to focus on loops was Golden Girls during the early 1980s. This introduced a number of porn girls like Ginger Lynn, Debi Diamond, Danielle and Stacey Donovan that would become famous later on in the decade.
The format eventually died with the introduction of video.






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