Joe D-amato - Queen Of Elephants 2- Sahara -19... Repack
Joe D’Amato (born Aristide Massaccesi) is one of cinema’s most protean figures: prolific, controversial, and endlessly adaptable. Best known for low-budget genre work across horror, erotic thriller, and exploitation cinema, D’Amato developed both a recognizable visual shorthand and an instinct for maximizing shock, atmosphere, and marketability on tiny budgets. “Queen of Elephants 2: Sahara -19...” reads like a title scraped from the wildest corners of exploitation distribution catalogs—one of those intriguing, half-mythical entries that invite curiosity: is it a lost sequel, a miscataloged rarity, or an evocative pastiche that channels D’Amato’s obsessions?
Joe D'Amato (born Aristide Massaccesi) is a legendary name within the world of European genre cinema, known for his relentless, prolific output across horror, adventure, and adult exploitation. While his name is often associated with the brutal Anthropophagus (1980) or the sword-and-sandal epic Ator (1982), D'Amato was also a master at crafting low-budget, high-concept erotic adventure films in the late 1980s and 1990s. One of the more peculiar, often confusing entries in his later filmography is the video production sometimes listed as (released in 1998, though sometimes referred to in context with his 1997 work). Joe D-Amato - Queen Of Elephants 2- Sahara -19...
The narrative of Sahara revolves around two wealthy European businessmen who travel to Morocco with the intent of purchasing a leather manufacturing company. Seeking to secure the business contract and immerse the foreigners in local customs, their Moroccan hosts introduce them to an array of exotic delights, lavish banquets, and sensual encounters. Joe D’Amato (born Aristide Massaccesi) is one of
As documented on IMDb's Sahara Trivia , there are . While the first film followed a wild woman raised in the jungle (played by iconic adult star Selen) who adapts to aristocratic life in Scotland, Sahara takes an entirely different narrative turn. Joe D'Amato (born Aristide Massaccesi) is a legendary
Despite the English DVD title Queen of Elephants Part 2 Sahara , critics and viewers have noted several inconsistencies:
This paper examines Queen of Elephants 2: Sahara , a late-career film by Italian exploitation director Joe D’Amato (Aristide Massaccesi). Released in 1999, the film serves as a quintessential example of the "exotic erotic" subgenre, blending adventure tropes with hardcore adult content. This analysis explores the film’s production context, its relationship to the "Black Emanuelle" legacy, and D’Amato’s utilization of the "sexploitation" formula in the transition from celluloid to digital video formats at the turn of the millennium.