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Now, he carries movies that promise, more than deliver, steamy scenes and glimpses of flesh
-- largely soft-core, with nudity but nothing to warrant an X rating. Among them, "Bare Witness," a straight-to-video erotic thriller starring Daniel Baldwin, the least known of the four Baldwin brothers, and Demi Moore's "Striptease." Each DVD, which includes several movies, costs 1,500 dinars ($1.20). But since 2007, violence has fallen dramatically around Iraq. Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki's government, backed by U.S. troops, cracked down on militias, helping bring about some semblance of order in the capital. Authorities currently have bigger challenges than cracking down on porn vendors or even brothels, said an Interior Ministry official, speaking on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to talk to the press. So Hanoun and others are back on the streets, even though he says it's still not entirely safe. "They still threaten to kill me," Hanoun said. He shrugged his shoulders with indifference when asked who "they" are. The militias, the police, "it doesn't matter if you're dead." It's the best job he can find, he explained, in a country where unemployment is officially pegged at slightly over 20 percent, but believed to be much higher. And the demand is there. Hanoun unloads scores of adult movies a day -- at nearly $3 each. His stock ranges from the mundane to the startlingly extreme, including bestiality. The titles alone -- many along the lines of "The Rape of the Coeds"
-- offer disturbing insight into the possible psychological effects the years of indiscriminate violence have had on Iraqis. Many have seen, if not first hand, then certainly on video and TV, children blown up, people kidnapped and beheaded and prisoners abused by U.S. forces. The films don't show actual rapes -- they're just titles tacked onto mainstream porn films downloaded from the Internet as well as homemade movies of amateur Arab couples. In a nod to the politically elusive dream of Arab unity, Hanoun carries a collection entitled "Cheap Meat." "It's got Syrian, Egyptian, Lebanese girls," he says. "All the Arabs." But, in an ironic symbol of the difficulty with which Arabs have had coming together, the DVD gets stuck in a loop in the first five minutes.
[Associated
Press;
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