"A stylish story about a TPE (total power exchange) relationship that goes all the way, complete with an equestrian-shop scene, from the director of Flashdance and Lolita."
"Look at the cover, and you'll understand why this long-running British TV series is held in such high esteem by connoisseurs of fetish (one of the British compilations is even titled "Kinky Boots")."
"Catherine Deneuve plays a bored housewife named Severine who becomes a prostitute looking for love in all the wrong places. Or maybe she's just fantasizing about it..."
"Perpetually prissy Hugh Grant and his wife, Kristen Scott Thomas, take a cruise where they alternate between repression and expression of their kinkiest desires."
"David Lynch's daughter horns in on the act with a psycho-sexy creepy crawler about an obsessive love affair that will thrill the amputee-fetish set to no end."
"Inspired by a 1942 noir classic, the director of American Gigolo explores the problems faced by those who can only find sexual satisfaction with their own kind."
"Bram Stoker's novel gets the full Russell treatment, which means much over-the-top weirdness in a manner not unlike Rocky Horror without the ironic smirks."
"The Marquis de Sade gets the full Hollywood treatment, and survives the process with flair and even a sense of fun, despite its lunatic-asylum setting."
"Richard O'Brien's campy corseted capers turned extreme kink into mainstream entertainment, and the film itself, in all its audience partici-pation glory, is nothing less than the fetish Wizard of Oz."
"Owing more than a little to Belle de Jour, a repressed wife seeks naughty (spelled "knotty") sexual satisfaction outside her marriage. Warning: romantic it's not."
"The rest of the first season in which the aforementioned mystery is solved. If you haven't seen it since it aired on ABC (?!?) a decade ago, treat yourself to the complete experience."
"Laura Palmer's body bound in plastic washing ashore is quite possibly the best opening scene ever, and the rest of the pilot defined a world more twisted than anything short of Kenneth Anger."
"The movie version is actually the prequel to the series, best viewed after watching the first eight episodes because it presumes you already know who killed Laura Palmer."