Affairs of Aphrodite
1974
THE Affairs of Aphrodite represents the skilifull blending of an ancient Grecian story with modern themes which does more to authenticate the original versions than could the watered down chilcis tales often accepted as truth. Aphrodite and her Brother, Apollo, live for all eternity the depraved lives of gods who are in fact slaves to all forms of depraved passion. As the story opens, Antiochus, their benefactor, purchases a slave for them at the local slave market. She is not only to perform the accepted duties of a servant, but also to assist them in their rituals of degradation.
What they don't know is that she is in reality Sappho, the exiled queen of Crete. At the same time they purchase a voluptuous native, Katenga, unaware that she too would play an important part in their lives, and takes the girls back to Mount Olympus. While at the palace Aphrodite and Apollo force Sappho and Utenga to endure a never ending series of perverted sexual deviations. Then one day Paris who is in
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love with Sappho, appears upon Mount Olympus, and tries to free Sappho. His attempt is thwarted, however, and he is brought to Aphrodite and Apollo who torture him with sadistically devised sexual attrocities.
Later, Paris and Sappho are bathing together and planning another escape from their captivity on Olympus. Katenga is at tending them and overhears their plot. She too wishes to leave the debauchery that she is suffering, and so she offers to help them in return for her company during the escape. As Katenga steals away from the palace to procure an escape boat at the fishing village below Olympus, she accidentally falls and injures herself. A soldier finds her, and rapes her. Assuming that the boat is already waiting for them at the harbor, Paris and Sappho happen upon Katenga just as she is mur dered by the soldier who attacked her. Paris, enraged, kills him on the spot.
Suddenly Apollo appears, and after a fight with the soon to be beaten Paris. Takes them back again to Olympus. Back at the palace, Apollo makes Paris undergo the ultimate in emotional pain and humiliation when, after tying him up, forces him to witness Sappho being mounted in what only can be called, logically enough, the Greek way. Aphrodite, then perhaps feeling remorse, makes Paris dream of yet another woman, Helen of Troy, Under Aphrodite's spell, Paris is allowed to leave. Sappho, whose tal ents in lovemaking are now being realized, watches her true lover, Paris, leave. They both see each other as they part, but their paths are going different ways, and so they must resign themselves to the fate decreed by the gods, after all.. . they are gods!
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