Pornography films through Kosovo corrosor ʹ at an exhibition

A 1983 romance, with actors Jerry Butler and Kelly Nichols, there was a poster for Yugoslav cinemas in those years. “In Love”, translated as Poverve Strasti, has the plaque where it finds a girl in complacency inside a sensual mouth. Such a poster has once been loosely placed in the streets [...]
A 1983 romance, with actors Jerry Butler and Kelly Nichols, there was a poster for Yugoslav cinemas in those years.
“In Love”, translated as Poverve Strasti, has the plaque where it finds a girl in complacency inside a sensual mouth. Such a poster has once been loosely located on the streets of Kosovo cities.
Such movie posters coming to Kosovo cinemas in the '90s since Friday are on display in the Soma Book Station.
The “Corzo” exhibition brings these posters, with them an undeniable reality that pornographic posters were once seen everywhere in Kosovo, even before the eyes of children and parents walking through the city's cords.
Baton Domi from the Soma Book Station says more about this former reality.
“We brought these original posters, but there's even harder to contain. There are examples of animal sex with humans. These that are on display in Soma are softer and present the reality of Yugoslav cinemas that were once filled with pornographic, not erotic, ” tells Baton Domi.
When you dated your parents in town at the time, there were pornographic posters in many parts of the city. This has happened in Pristina, Pec, Prizren and other cities. The reason we've exposed them is to bring back that collective memory that's hidden from the people that the men especially participated in.” tells Batoni. Exposed posters have been received by Kino Lumbardi in Prizren.

Plaques are obviously a former aggression. No less neglected is the film poster “Devojski is taxi”, the Yugoslav translation for the renowned “Taxi Girls”, which belongs to an adult cinema. However, these films were also seen by children.
“Kinemies with these movies have built your imagination in this regard, because we have no sex education in schools. You weren't even right with your friends about this. These films, whose posters are in Soma, have also contributed to the female-male report and helped to the frustration that still exists today” Domi relates.
Dom shows that this kind of cinema and these types of posters throughout the city have also been part of an agenda to deregulate people's attention on other issues, such as the Bosnian War, and the collapse of the entire Yugoslavia project.

As the posters are still found in the Soma Book Station in the capital, where you can see them and get more acquainted with the concept of this exhibition, we conclude this conversation with Dom, taking another important side of the impact of these film tablets on the everyday lives of citizens who were their victims.
“Sexualism is represented in this way in cinema, and this has helped me to fertilize sexual act. In fact, we as children have learned a lot from cinema in this regard, and this has degraded the way of communication between genders and communication in general” shows Domi.
Such cinema was supposed to have existed sometime until 1997, when the situation in Kosovo also became tense and war took place. / KultPlus. com