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Diora Baird as LaCienega Torrez
Status Completed
Release date n/a
Directed by Gregg Sacon, Michael B. Silver
Written by Gregg Sacon, Michael B. Silver
Other cast Nina Hartley, Mark Feuerstein
Genre Comedy
MPAA rating n/a
Further details Gallery | Official | IMDB

Official Synopsis:

In the annals of porn history, there is no bigger name than Mo Saltzman. The legendary producer and director was responsible for a staggering number of innovations – musical pornography (Diddler On The Roof), porn for the hearing-impaired (Pile-Driving Miss Daisy), and porn-toons (Phallus in Wonderland) – and is widely credited as having broken the color barrier in adult films with the first interracial Dirty Sanchez (Guess Who’s Coming On Dinner). Over the course of his illustrious, 40-year career, Mo touched the lives of countless porn stars, welcoming them into his home and into his heart.

When Mo passed away in the spring of 2007, he left behind an old steamer trunk filled with storyboards, script notes, and a screenplay called Dial M for Milk Jugs – the magnum opus he wanted, but failed, to make before he died. Upon discovering the script, director Mack Hollister decided to shoot Dial M for Milk Jugs as a fond farewell to Mo, using a dream team cast of porn stars past and present.

Love Shack documents Hollister’s attempts to complete “the greatest porno of all time” despite a mountain of obstacles working against him. 80s “It” couple Doug and Debbie Vanderspiegl—secretly separated for six months—can’t hide their animosity; Whitney Sweet, an unrepentant, fad-obsessed Diva, goes to war with her unsuspecting co-star, Hallie Lujah as they prepare for their first lesbian encounter; the Sphincter Brothers, a once-great tag-team duo, struggle to come to terms with the “incident” that ripped them apart in 1999; and the only ones having sex are 60 year-olds, Bud Hurley and Lynette Kelly!

Add to all this a dominatrix with low self-esteem, a mentally-unstable “fluffer,” and a ubiquitous production assistant, and Mack Hollister has some serious work cut out for him. Can he get Dial M for Milk Jugs shot with so much baggage weighing it down? And will the film’s stars set aside their issues and truly honor Mo Saltzman, the man who did so much for so many?