The term 'patrol' might conjure images of watchful eyes on duty, but in the realm of adult cinema, it takes on a different, more suggestive meaning. Over the years, various film titles have incorporated this word, often hinting at themes of observation, enforcement, or even voyeurism within adult narratives.
One notable example is the 1999 American film titled simply "Black Patrol." Directed by Peter Gozeinya and produced by All Worlds Video, this movie, running at 90 minutes, featured actors like Kevin Kemp and J.C. Carter. Interestingly, a song from this film was later included in the 2003 movie "Bodysong." The original "Black Patrol" was a color film released in English.
Moving into the late 90s and early 2000s, we see a series of films that lean into the "Black Beach Patrol" theme. "Black Beach Patrol 3," a joint US-Canadian production from 1998, was explicitly categorized as an adult film. It even saw a display on the CCTV6 official website's video platform. Its alias was "Vanity." Following this, "Black Beach Patrol 2" emerged in 1997, also a US-Canadian collaboration, starring Lil Ass and Cinnabunz. Then came "Black Beach Patrol 11" in 2002, featuring Ayana Angel and Byron Long among its cast, produced in the United States.
Beyond the "Black Beach Patrol" series, other titles play with similar concepts. "Sex Patrol," a 1997 US production from Adam & Eve Pictures and Ultimate Pictures, offered a runtime of 98 minutes. More recently, "Pervs on Patrol" has appeared as a TV series, first released in 2010, and is also categorized as adult content, with directors like Levi Cash and Marc Mojo associated with it. Another series, "Trike Patrol," began in September 2006 in the United States, also falling under the adult TV series umbrella.
These titles, while varied in their specific narratives and production eras, collectively demonstrate a recurring motif in adult filmmaking. The "patrol" element seems to serve as a narrative device, inviting audiences into scenarios that often involve a sense of surveillance, pursuit, or a specific thematic focus within the adult genre.
