Twisted Sister Porn Comic

Twisted Sister Porn Comic




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Twisted Sister Porn Comic
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Jen Soska (left) and Sylvia Soska (right) with actress Tristan Risk (center) at Fantastic Fest , 2014

^ Leiren-Young, Mark. "Vancouver's Soska Sisters bring the madness to Whistler Film Festival" . Canada.com. Archived from the original on 2013-06-25 . Retrieved 2011-08-07 .

^ Jump up to: a b "Twisted sisters stick the knife into their latest film American Mary" . if.com.au . Retrieved 2015-10-14 .

^ Torrevillas, Phylicia. "Call them the twisted sisters" . Metro Vancouver . Archived from the original on 2012-08-04 . Retrieved 2011-08-07 .

^ Whittington, James. "Exclusive Interview With Jen And Sylvia Soska, Directors Of Dead Hooker In A Trunk" . Horror Channel . Retrieved 2011-07-31 .

^ Christie, Greg. "Boozie Movies! Dead Hooker in a Trunk Review" . Twitch Film . Archived from the original on 2011-12-09 . Retrieved 2011-07-31 .

^ "IFC Midnight Picks Up Dead Hooker in a Trunk for Limited Theatrical and VOD Release" . Joblo.com. 26 July 2011 . Retrieved 2011-07-31 .

^ "Bloody Disgusting" . Bloody Disgusting. 26 July 2011 . Retrieved 2011-07-31 .

^ "Film Review: Dead Hooker In A Trunk" . Brutalashell.com. Archived from the original on 2012-02-02 . Retrieved 2011-07-31 .

^ "Rants and Raves" . KPBS . Retrieved 2011-07-31 .

^ Jett, Kristy. "Soska Sister talks "AMERICAN MARY" casting and more" . Fangoria . Retrieved 2011-08-07 .

^ "American Mary" . Dread Central . Retrieved 2011-07-31 .

^ Freville, Bob. "Soska Twins Talk About Ass-Kicking, Hookers & American Mary" . Kotorimagazine.com . Retrieved 2011-07-31 .

^ Rose, Steve (11 January 2013). "The Soska sisters are the new faces of horror" . The Guardian . Retrieved 5 July 2014 .

^ "About Us" . Twisted Twins Productions . 2011. Archived from the original on 5 October 2014 . Retrieved 5 July 2014 .

^ "Dead Hooker in a Trunk" . Rotten Tomatoes . 2009-12-31 . Retrieved 2015-10-14 .

^ https://www.horrorsociety.com/2011/04/11/dead-hooker-in-a-trunk-banned/ . {{ cite web }} : Missing or empty |title= ( help )

^ "Sylvia Soska - Biography" . imdb.com . 2014 . Retrieved 5 July 2014 .

^ "American Mary" . Rotten Tomatoes . 2013-05-31 . Retrieved 2015-10-14 .

^ "Vendetta" . Rotten Tomatoes . 2015-06-12 . Retrieved 2015-10-14 .

^ "David Cronenberg's 'Rabid' Remake: Soska Sisters Ready Their 'Continuation' of Body Horror Classic with 'Female Perspective' " . 15 February 2018.

^ " 'Supergirl' & 'Jigsaw' Star Laura Vandervoort Joins Reboot of David Cronenberg's Horror Classic 'Rabid' – Cannes" . 11 May 2018.

^ "411Mania" .


Films directed by the Soska sisters
Jen Soska and Sylvia Soska (born April 29, 1983), [1] also known as The Soska Sisters or The Twisted Twins , [2] are Canadian twin sisters who work together as film directors , producers and screenwriters . [3] [4] [5] [6] [7] [8] [9] They are known for directing often violent and visceral horror movies such as Dead Hooker in a Trunk , See No Evil 2 and American Mary . [10] [11] [12]

Jen and Sylvia Soska were born on April 29 in Canada. The twins graduated from Argyle Secondary School . Their love of horror began at an early age, when their mother gave in to their constant begging to watch Poltergeist . [13] They decided to work in the horror movie field soon after, initially trying to become actresses and working as extras, but were unhappy with the stereotypical twin roles they were being offered. [14]

Jen and Sylvia briefly attended film school and wrote and directed Dead Hooker in a Trunk as a final project. The film was shot for $2,500 and released by IFC . It received an overall rating of 80% from critics at Rotten Tomatoes (4 fresh and 1 rotten review). [15] The twins starred in the film as twin sisters – Badass (Sylvia) and Geek (Jen). Highly inspired by Robert Rodriguez 's Rebel Without A Crew , the Soskas sought out El Mariachi star Carlos Gallardo to play the character God.

An absurdist dark satire, Dead Hooker in a Trunk originated as a faux trailer the sisters created, annoyed when their film school cut the budget for their final project. The film had a screening cancelled by one movie theater in Saskatoon after the theater received anonymous complaints. [16]

Following their first project, the twins wrote American Mary [17] which was shown at Film4 Fright Fest , Toronto After Dark Film Festival and Monster Fest. [2] [18] The twins cast Canadian horror star Katharine Isabelle (Ginger Snaps) as Mary Mason, and had special effects created by Masters FX. Wanting to be respectful to the body modification community, the sisters hired flesh artist Russ Foxx as a consultant to ensure authenticity. American Mary went on to win the Special Jury Award at Fantastic Fest.

The sisters directed a segment in ABCs of Death 2 titled "T is for Torture Porn", which follows an actress, Yumi, as she auditions for an adult film scene. Yumi is revealed to be a hentai monster. The film was produced by XYZ Films.

Jen and Sylvia Soska made two films for WWE Studios : See No Evil 2 and Vendetta . [19] See No Evil 2 again featured Katharine Isabelle. Avid fans of professional wrestling, the Soskas were hired to resurrect the franchise after a six year hiatus.

The first film in the Lionsgate and WWE Studios Action Six Pack was the Soska Sisters' action film Vendetta , written by Justin Shady. The film stars Dean Cain as Mason Danvers, who goes into prison in pursuit of the man who killed his wife.

The Soskas co-wrote and directed Rabid (2019), a remake of David Cronenberg 's 1977 film of the same name , [20] starring Laura Vandervoort [21] and professional wrestler CM Punk . [22] Avid fans of David Cronenberg's work, the Soskas hired cast and crew from Cronenberg's previous films. They again collaborated with Masters FX, hiring Steve Kostanski as head creature designer.

Rabid had its World Premiere on the closing night of the 20th Annual Fright Fest in London. It would go on to play film festivals throughout Europe and was released on Blu-ray on October 7, 2019. It had its North American Premiere on October 15, 2019 in LA at Screamfest. Shout! Factory released the film theatrically and on VOD December 13, 2019.

Jen and Sylvia have written for Marvel Comics, writing a Night Nurse story for Marvel's Secret Wars Journal #5 in 2015, a short story called The Ripley with the Guardians of the Galaxy, and a Deadpool story for the first annual Avengers Halloween Special . In January 2019, the Soska Sisters started writing Black Widow for Marvel with illustrator, Flaviano in a series called 'Seeing Red.'

The twins hosted both seasons of the Blumhouse-produced Hellevator on GSN . They were interviewed for Eli Roth 's History of Horror which aired October 2018.

In April 2021, it was announced that the Soskas would be working for DC Comics with their first story being a part of their DC Round Robin in which fans choose their favorites in an online voting competition.


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The Filthy Fifteen: Censorship, Gore And The Parental Advisory Sticker

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Seeking to rid music of offensive content, Tipper Gore’s Parents Music Resource Center used the Filthy Fifteen to bring their cause to the Senate.
It has been decades since 15 songs – the so-called “Filthy Fifteen” – were declared obscene in America. The designation of a Filthy Fifteen was part of a backlash campaign that ended with the imposition of stickers on albums warning of “explicit lyrics.” Yet the controversy over these “dangerous” songs remains a cultural talking point and, as recently as May 2018, award-winning composer Nicole Lizée toured a show about the controversy, including a performance at London’s acclaimed Barbican Theatre.
Though the debate over what is acceptable in print was nothing new – Cole Porter jokes about writers who “only use four-letter words” in “Anything Goes” in 1934 – a national dispute over offensive lyrics started in 1984, when Prince released his groundbreaking album Purple Rain . Tipper Gore, wife of Senator Al Gore, bought a copy of the record for her 11-year-old daughter. She described her ensuing outrage in her book Raising PG Kids In An X-Rated Society , describing what happened when mother and daughter listened to the track “Darling Nikki,” which includes a line about a “sex fiend masturbating with a magazine.” Gore wrote: “The vulgar lyrics embarrassed both of us. At first, I was stunned, but then I got mad.”
Together with three other prominent conservative housewives – Susan Baker (wife of Treasury Secretary James Baker), Pam Howar (wife of Raymond Howar, a real-estate developer who was active in the Republican Party) and Sally Nevius (whose husband, John, was appointed Washington City Council Chairman by President Nixon) – Tipper formed the Parents Music Resource Center ( PMRC ) and they compiled the Filthy Fifteen: a list of songs they found most objectionable. Prince topped the list.
The PMRC lobbied hard and rallied support among PTAs in school. By August 1985, 19 record companies had agreed to put “Parental Guidance: Explicit Lyrics” labels on certain albums. The PMRC even devised its own “porn rock” rating system, with an “X” for profane or sexually explicit lyrics; “O” for occult references; “D/A” for lyrics about drugs and alcohol; and “V” for violent content. Cyndi Lauper’s song “She Bop,” for example, had the PMRC’s knickers in a twist because of the “filthy” lyric about “picking up good vibration.”
On September 19, 1985, the Senate’s Committee On Commerce, Science And Transportation held a hearing about the need to put warning labels on albums. The PMRC put forward their case and three musicians provided testimony. Frank Zappa said, “If it looks like censorship and it smells like censorship, it is censorship, no matter whose wife is talking about it.” Dee Snider, lead singer of heavy metal band Twisted Sister, argued that it was a straightforward infringement of civil liberties.
The third musician was John Denver. Snider recalled: “Gotta give John Denver credit. His testimony was one of the most scathing because they fully expected – he was such a mom’s, American pie, John Denver Christmas special, fresh-scrubbed guy – that he would be on the side of censorship. When he brought up, ‘I liken this to the Nazi book burnings,’ you should’ve seen them start running for the hills. His testimony was the most powerful in many ways.”
Despite Denver’s intervention, the PMRC got their way, and stickers were introduced. However, it didn’t necessarily work out the way they wanted. Heavy metal bands on the list received a sales and publicity boost, and the sort of lyrics that followed in rock, rap, and even country music suggests that the group was fighting a losing battle. Not that they see it that way. Susan Baker recently told Time magazine that it still gives her a smile when she sees a Parental Advisory sticker and knows she helped make that happen.
The campaign did a lot of good, she insisted. Perhaps. Or perhaps all that Tipper and her gang ultimately achieved was curating an awesome mixtape of 15 filthy songs for rebellious teenagers of the late 80s.
Prince’s song, from Purple Rain , was actually written from the standpoint of a boy who was trying to humiliate a girlfriend who starts working for a rival. It was the reference to a girl masturbating that particularly enraged Tipper Gore. Looking back on the row in 2004, Prince said simply: “Times were different back then.” The album has been certified 13-times platinum and has sold more than 25 million copies worldwide.
“Sugar Walls” was from Scottish singer Sheena Easton’s album Private Heaven , and it was pretty obvious what she was getting at with references to “blood racing to private spots” and “spending the night inside my sugar walls.” The song was credited to Alexander Nevermind, a pseudonym for Prince. The single had everything to rile the women who put together the Filthy Fifteen. At the time, Easton defended herself, saying, “We are not embarrassed to be sexy when we want to be. Men have never had to apologize for being sexy. Art is all about being free and if you don’t like it, then tune in to something else.”
Judas Priest had been making albums for a decade by the time Defenders Of The Faith came out. The song on the album that caused such a rumpus was “Eat Me Alive,” with lyrics about a “rod of steel” and “groan in the pleasure zone.” Gore said the song advocated “oral sex at gunpoint.” The band responded in 1986 with a tune called “Parental Guidance.” The band’s founding guitarist, KK Downing, said they wondered: “Have we gone too far?” before deciding, “We were a metal band. We didn’t sing about daffodils and roses.”
Wild Animal was the debut solo album by Canadian singer Vanity (Denise Katrina Matthews), which was released by Motown Records in November 1984. The sexually provocative lyrics – “If you want to glide down my hallway, it’s open/Strap yourself in and ride” – were written by her then-boyfriend Robbie Bruce. A few years later she posed nude for Playboy and said she was “just putting all of me out there.” Before her death, in 2016, aged 57, she said she regretted being “young and irresponsible, a silly woman laden with sin,” and said that, in later life, “seeking truth in Jesus Christ set me free.”
Shout At The Devil is the second studio album by US heavy metal band Mötley Crüe , and the song “Bastard” made it on to the Filthy Fifteen list because of the violent lyrics about stabbing someone to death. However, the warning sticker just seemed to attract buyers. Singer Vince Neil said years later: “Once you put that sticker on, that parental-warning sticker, that album took off. Those kids wanted it even more.”
A five-year-old tune from the Australian band AC/DC, from the album Back In Black , stirred up a row between the band and the PMRC, who said the lyrics “let me cut your cake with my knife” were profane. The band claimed the attempt to censor them was “Satanic intolerance.”
Dee Snider, the vocalist and songwriter of Twisted Sister’s “We’re Not Gonna Take It,” defended the song from allegations that it promoted violence; ultimately, it reached No.2 on the Billboard charts. Snider said: “It strikes me that the PMRC may have confused our video presentation for this song… with the meaning of the lyrics. It is no secret that the videos often depict storylines completely unrelated to the lyrics of the song they accompany. The video ‘We’re Not Gonna Take It’ was simply meant to be a cartoon with human actors playing variations on the Road Runner-Wile E Coyote theme. Each stunt was selected from my extensive personal collection of cartoons.”
No list of shocking songs from the 80s would be complete without Madonna . The one that got her on to the Filthy Fifteen was “Dress You Up,” from the album Like A Virgin . The song was composed by Andrea LaRusso and Peggy Stanziale, who were described as “two New Jersey housewives” in newspaper reports. The lyrics – “Gonna dress you up in my love/All over your body” – hardly seem explicit and Madonna laughed off the row, saying, “I’m sexy. How can I avoid it?”
There were claims that WASP lead singer and guitarist Blackie Lawless wrote the song after seeing a photograph of lions mating in National Geographic magazine; its title alone guaranteed its place on the PMRC hit parade. The band used to introduce the song at concerts with the words, “Well, this one is for Tipper Gore.” Lawless also later became a born-again Christian and stopped performing the song.
Drug and alcohol references landed Def Leppard in trouble with the PMRC, especially for the lines “I got my whiskey/I got my wine/I got my woman/And this time, the lights are going out.” The British rockers were bemused by the row, declaring that they had no interest in people with “closed minds.”
The song “Into The Coven,” by Danish heavy band Mercyful Fate, appeared on their album Melissa . The women behind the Filthy Fifteen claimed the song fostered an unhealthy interest in the occult, with its plea to “come into my coven and become Lucifer’s child.” The band said the song was just a musical horror story and, years later, singer King Diamond told Rolling Stone magazine, “The whole thing was just pathetic. We thought they must be really bored to have time for this. How they saw those songs said more about them than it did about us.”
Lyrics about driving after drinking a bottle of tequila would make any sensible person worried, but singer Ian Gillan said that “Trashed” was in fact about how he had crashed drummer Bill Ward’s car during an alcohol-fueled race around the grounds of the recording studio. He claimed that the real purpose of the song was to act as a warning against driving under the influence. The band admitted that the accompanying video was intentionally lewd.
“In My House” was written and arranged by Rick James and recorded by American girl group Mary Jane Girls for their album Only Four You . The so-called explicit lyrics were lines such as “I’ll satisfy your every need/And every fantasy you think up.” Singer Jojo McDuffie said that the song was just “making an innuendo, purposely and tastefully, because Rick wanted the song to be played on the radio.”
The album Possessed was released on April Fool’s Day in 1985, and the title track was one of (deliberately, presumably) 13 songs. The lyrics – “I drink the vomit of the priests/Make love with the dying whore” – were certainly unpleasant, and landed the band on the Filthy Fifteen list. “It was by no means the most controversial song I wrote,” said frontman Cronos. The album, incidentally, was recorded in a quaint S
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