Jewelz Blu Stars in Latest From Hentaied

Jewelz Blu Stars in Latest From Hentaied

HOLLYWOOD, Calif. — Jewelz Blu stars in the latest scene from Hentaied, “Under The Bed,” directed by Ricky Greenwood.

The scene opens with Blu “in a spine-tingling scenario at a mysterious motel,” the synopsis reveals. “As the night unfolds, her character is awakened by the enigmatic monster living beneath the bed, plunging viewers into a world where desire and the supernatural collide.”

Blu enthused about the scene.

“My recent performance in Hentaied’s ‘Under The Bed’ pushed my boundaries as an actor/performer in the best way possible, really teaching me to let go of any inhibitions and fully give myself to the scenario,” she said. “It was truly such an exhilarating and intense experience for a solo performance.

“I’m so amazed at myself for playing into the part of being terrified under the bed but also making something so hot that it leaves the viewer turned on and perplexed,” she added. “I want to give a big shoutout to Ricky Greenwood for his amazing directing and the crew for being part of bringing this to life.”

The scene is streaming on Hentaied.

Follow Jewelz Blu on X.com.

Related:  

Korina Kova Guests on ‘Inside OnlyFans’ Podcast

HOLLYWOOD, Calif. — Korina Kova is the latest guest on the “Inside OnlyFans” podcast, hosted by Kayla Lauren and CJ Sparxx.

During the interview, Kova discusses her pleasure product collection and the risks of cosmetic surgery among other topics

“I had an absolute blast on the ‘Inside OnlyFans’ podcast with Kayla and CJ,” Kova said. “We had a lot of fun discussing topics that give fans a closer look into my life and experiences. I encourage everyone to tune in.”

The episode is streaming on YouTube.

Follow Korina Kova on X.com.

Related:  

Jessica Starling Toplines Bryan Gozzling’s ‘Hookup Hotshot: E-Girls 9’

Jessica Starling Toplines Bryan Gozzling's 'Hookup Hotshot: E-Girls 9'

LOS ANGELES — Jessica Starling headlines director Bryan Gozzling’s “Hookup Hotshot: E-Girls 9,” from Evil Angel.

The title also features Jenna Fireworks, Rebel Rhyder, Riley Jean, Bryan Gozzling, Dorian Del Isla and Nade Nasty.

“When we started our journey through the horny E-girls of the Internet, we never dreamed we would get to do it nine times,” enthused Gozzling. “We can’t decide which one of these four horny chatroom sluts we like best, so let’s just say we believe that the Internet is the best invention since the mini bikini.”

“Hookup Hotshot: E-Girls 9” is streaming on EvilAngelVideo; Starling’s scene is streaming on EvilAngel, with the subsequent scenes being released through the week.

Follow Starling on X.com.

Related:  

Chuck Conrad Stars in ‘The Wood Lurker’ From Men.com

Chuck Conrad Stars in 'The Wood Lurker' From Men.com

LOS ANGELES — Chuck Conrad stars with Sam Ledger in ‘The Wood Lurker’ from Men.com.

“In the scene, Sam Ledger plays a cryptid vlogger on the trail of the biggest legend yet — the Wood Lurker (Conrad), an enormous man with an enormous D who lurks in the woods,” said a rep. “Sam documents his journey as he pitches his tent, not noticing the hung giant watching him through the trees and creeping closer. Sam hides in his tent when he hears a noise, and Chuck bides his time, picking his moment to shake the tent with a mighty roar, then carry Sam through the woods.”

“The Wood Lurker” premieres Sept. 22 on Men.com.

Follow Conrad on X.com.

Related:  

‘Primary’ Climax: Casey Calvert Discusses Lust Cinema Series Finale

‘Does XBIZ want to visit the set when we shoot the full-length music video, or when we do the movie-within-the-movie at the Western ranch?”

Not the kind of question your adult industry reporter usually faces when covering a shoot. But then, Casey Calvert is not your average director.

Following her sweep of the 2023 XBIZ Awards — winning Feature Director of the Year and Best Screenplay, while her high-profile 2022 projects “Going Up” and “Sorrow Bay” took Feature of the Year and All-Girl Movie of the Year, respectively — it would have been understandable had Calvert taken a well-earned vacation and rested on her laurels for a bit. Instead, she took the awards bonanza as a challenge.

The “Birdman”-influenced “Going Up” was a complicated shoot featuring intricate Steadicam acrobatics and a cast of dozens. Now Calvert’s propensity for self-demand dictated that she push the creative and logistical boundaries even further with her follow-up: the third and final season of “Primary.”

Season 3 marks Calvert’s return to the series on which, she recalls, Lust Cinema’s commitment to quality content and diverse casts and crews first gave her room to grow as a filmmaker.

“In Season 1 of ‘Primary,’ I established this very mumblecore, lo-fi cinematography aesthetic,” Calvert tells XBIZ months later, as she is busy editing the six episodes of the third season for its imminent unveiling in late July. “I did that because I was a new director and also that was aesthetically what I liked in 2019.”

“Don’t get me wrong!” she adds. “The vibe of Season 1 was exactly what I wanted to see at the time, and what I was feeling inspired by then. But being perfectly honest, in hindsight, that was also what I could direct at the time. I didn’t have the language or the skill set to direct anything more complicated than that, and that became the aesthetic for the first two seasons of ‘Primary,’ and it worked so well.”

After completing Season 2 in 2021, as soon as the pandemic restrictions were lifted, Calvert took a break from her intricate jigsaw puzzle of hip 20- and 30-something Los Angeles creatives trying to navigate the often tricky world of polyamory.

“When I was putting together ‘Sorrow Bay’ and ‘Going Up,’ during the ‘Primary’ hiatus, I decided that I wanted to learn more about and get more involved in cinematography for my 2022 projects,” Calvert explains. “In simpler words, I just wanted to be fancier with what I’m doing with the camera.”

The educational experiment worked, as evidenced by the aforementioned awards bonanza — but it also unleashed previously unglimpsed auteurial ambitions.

“When I was in prep for Season 3 of ‘Primary,’ I was like, ‘Do I want to go back to this lo-fi aesthetic?” Calvert recalls. “Or do I want to have this look like my movies from last year?’ What I ended up deciding — and I think it was the right choice — was to kind of merge the two approaches.”

Thus, the final season of “Primary” still reflects the influence of early 2000s mumblecore indie films and lower-budget, limited-run Netflix productions like “Easy” — plenty of two-shots, not a lot of super-tight close-ups. Unlike previous seasons, however, there are also roaming Steadicam shots amid, for example, a vast 19th-century Western town location.

“We did get a little bit fancier with some coverage and some inserts, and very selectively picked scenes to get more creative with while still maintaining the aesthetic of what the world of ‘Primary’ that we had carefully built over two seasons looks like,” Calvert notes.

“I think that was really successful,” she beams, showing a preliminary cut of one of the episodes. “It still looks like a little indie movie, like I always wanted it to.”

Tricky Flowcharts of Polyamory

Much like real-life polyamory — a subject Calvert is very much invested in both professionally and personally — keeping track of the characters and their nuanced relationships throughout three seasons of “Primary” can require pen and paper, if not chart-making skills.

The final season takes place a year after the events of the previous one, which aired in 2021. Season 3 is anchored around three main couples: Abigail and Parker (Ana Foxxx and Derrick Pierce), Eva and Olivia (Kira Noir and Victoria Voxxx) and Dean and Violet (Codey Steele and Siri Dahl). While the first two couples will be familiar to viewers of the previous seasons, Dean and Violet are newcomers for this final installment.

In true poly tradition, though, that’s just the tip of the iceberg. Crucial plot points concern Phoebe (Calvert herself), who lives with Abigail and Parker; Joyce (Ryan Keely); Patrick (Michael Vegas) as a charming hookup; Leo Vice as Elliot, another charming hookup; Vanessa Vega as Abigail’s solace-providing friend Zoe; Sid (Alice White); and recurring from previous seasons, Joe (Cam Damage) and Jacob (Small Hands), the latter appearing via Zoom from New York in a crucial, plot-forwarding role.

Okay, and what’s happening with the poly issues?

“Abigail and Parker are married, and then Phoebe is their partner, who moved in with them,” Calvert elucidates. “But we’re not calling it a triad, because I don’t think that’s what they are. Phoebe moved in more as a platonic friend who sometimes fucks them, and they say ‘I love you’ but they’re not necessarily dating as a triad. There’s a little bit of an exploration of what that looks like.”

The idea of “exploration” keeps surfacing in Calvert’s description of this labor-of-love project: What does it mean, in practice, in 2023, to be polyamorous? What are all the flavors? What are all the possibilities? How to navigate, or negotiate, these nontraditional relationships?

“Eva and Olivia are dating,” she continues. “Olivia is very much a monogamous person who has given Eva permission to explore in a ‘don’t ask, don’t tell’ kind of way. Eva, on the other hand, as we know from all previous seasons, is not a monogamous person: that does not work out for her. So she has been accepting of this ‘don’t ask, don’t tell’ thing, but it very much comes to a head in Episode 5 of this season.”

As additions to the central cast, Dean and Violet add yet another layer to the smorgasbord of affective and sexual possibilities.

“Dean is the first AD for the movie they are adapting from Parker’s book, and Violet is the producer of Olivia’s music video,” Calvert reveals. “Dean and Violet are in an open relationship — they’re probably what one would call ‘swingers,’ but I’m just not really leaning into that because that’s not what I want to explore. I’m exploring poly, not swinging.”

Season 3 is structured like a symphony of polyamory, where the plot passes like a leitmotif from one group of characters to another through a connecting third group. All this makes for a complex but fun editing challenge.

“There’s a lot of scenes where we’ll be with Parker, then we’ll be with Dean, and Dean will text Violet and then we’ll be over here with these other characters, and the focus passes through,” she explains, running her index finger around the literal flowchart of poly characters and relationships she has drawn for us.

A Full Music Video

Having taken Calvert up on both set visits, we arrive first at the music video location, in a fully-functional arts complex in the Los Angeles area. It is still early in the almost two-week shoot — atypical for mainstream porn schedules, but by now par for the course for “Primary.”

The willingness of top talent to block off several days for Calvert’s productions speaks to her reputation among the performers.

Drawing upon Victoria Voxxx’s off-porn career as the leader of her own Vegas-based band, Voxxx, Calvert crafted the character of Olivia as an ambitious musician and took advantage of the multi-season, multi-year nature of the project to give her a realistic career arc.

“Shooting a big music video felt like the next progression for Olivia,” Calvert explains, as the AD gives blocking instructions to the real-life members of Voxxx for what will end up being an actual video shoot for their song “Without You.” In highly meta fashion, that actual video for the real band is being directed by Casey Calvert, while the BTS is documented for inclusion in “Primary” as a project by Voxxx’s character.

“So much of this season is about work and how work affects romantic relationships,” Calvert muses. “We met Olivia as a struggling musician a year ago, but now her music career is going well and so she naturally is shooting a video. Around the same time the series comes out, there will be a completed music video for Victoria’s song. This is a cross-promotional tool for the film, but also it’s legitimately for her to showcase her enormous talent and her music.”

Olivia’s success is the catalyst that connects her and Eva’s storyline to the work/love themes of the show’s final season. A powerful music world figure, Jacob dated Eva in Season 1, but in Season 2 met Olivia and is now helping her with her career.

“Eva at first doesn’t mind,” Calvert notes. “Eva is happy for Olivia to have success. But now Jacob wants her to go on tour with him. The label wants to get to know her a little better and asked for a video. So Jacob is funding this music video.”

As Voxxx runs through a playback of “Without You,” the director contemplates the evolution of her cast.

“You know, I’m a different director than I was in 2019,” she reflects. “And Kira and Victoria and Ana and Derrick, they’re all such different people than when we started this show. Think about Small Hands and where he was in 2019 and where he is now — literally! He’s on the other side of the country!”

Calvert smiles, moved by the thought.

“I feel really lucky that I was able to have the same cast spread out over four years, who were still excited to come play these characters that I wrote specifically for them. I wrote these characters for who we were in 2019, and then for who we were in 2021.”

They are all very different people now, she acknowledges.

“For many reasons, Season 3 ends this wonderful project,” she says quietly. “I wrote the season with a conclusion. It ends. One of the things I really wanted to make sure I did for this season was keep the heart and the core of ‘Primary’ — it’s still a show about polyamory. And a show about relationships. And a show about how lives intertwine.”

Trying to push that into a fourth season, she adds, would inevitably cause the show to slip farther away from what it was meant to be.

“So it’s done,” she declares. “This is it.”

Season 3 ends with a montage, for which Calvert commissioned an original song.

“Throughout all the seasons, there’s a band named Marni I’ve been working with,” she explains. “It’s this musician I met at a show by Phoebe Bridgers’ original band, and ended up working with him on all three seasons of ‘Primary.’”

Previously, Calvert had licensed Marni’s music, but this season, the band’s mastermind reached out and asked if he could craft her an original song. Her response?

“‘Why yes, you can!’” Calvert reports. “And I sent him the script and a piece of art for inspiration. And the final song, ‘Pollock Pines,’ is just — perfect. It made me cry.”

The Western Town

For the second visit, we drove out to one of those mythical movie ranches that have provided a backdrop for Hollywood magic since the beginnings of Tinseltown. Watching “Primary,” keen-eyed viewers will probably be able to identify the “Western” location from mainstream movies and TV shows.

In Season 2, writer Parker was writing a script for a movie based on his book “Talking to Ghosts.” In Season 3, the movie is being made.

“Parker goes on set and he hates the movie,” Calvert says. “He’s very unhappy with how they are portraying his characters, and how they have changed his script. He is taking out his frustration when he goes home.”

“Going Up” crucially features a play-within-the-movie. Also, the character Calvert plays in “Primary,” Phoebe, is a poet, so there are actual poems-within-the-movie. A pattern?

“Yeah, I keep doing this,” Calvert laughs, as PAs with walkie-talkies buzz around her, going in and out of movie trailers where the costume designer is outfitting extras in full-on cowboy gear. “I’ve been thinking a lot about why. And I think maybe the only reason why I keep doing different variations of film-within-a-film is because I can only write about what I know, right? And this, right now, is what I know.”

The movie-within-the-movie serves to comment on Parker’s relationship with his own work and filmmaking. It very much has a dramatic purpose, which is to make Parker miserable.

Though a generous booster of all her actors, Calvert reserves special praise for Derrick Pierce.

“I think he is so underrated as an actor in this industry,” she says. “I don’t think he’s ever won an acting award. And he auditioned for me in Season 1 like everyone else did. He was very good. But now? One of my favorite scenes in Episode 3 is a scene where Derrick and I are sitting out by the pool at night, he’s smoking a cigar. And he’s just so good. I think that people see him as this ‘muscle tattoo gym dude’ and overlook just how great he is as an actor, both for drama and comedy.”

The day continues as take after take is attempted both for “Primary” and for the Western.

“This is absolutely my most expensive location,” Calvert says, trying to marshal the small army of production personnel needed to pull this off. Some of the “Primary” crew are doubling as the movie-within-the-movie crew, but there are also extras — and two leads, Steele and Keely — playing crew members for the Western. It’s mayhem, but the good, fruitful, creative kind.

“Plot-wise, I really needed this set,” Calvert asserts. “Parker had to be here because he’s supposed to be writing his next book and his agent is hounding him, but he’s so obsessed with the problem in his brain that is this movie all around us, that it’s ruining his relationship.”

Over the course of Season 3’s six episodes, Parker will come to realize that he has to let this go and protect what is most important: his relationships and the people in his life.

“The whole goal of going to the Western town was to take Derrick Pierce’s character and put him in a place where he doesn’t belong,” Calvert shares, months later. “That absolutely was successful and was absolutely worth the extra work of making everyone drive an hour out of Los Angeles and have a wild production day at the Western town.”

Calvert admits that the shoot was “a lot, and very hot.”

“You need RVs and you need bathrooms and you need a water truck. And you need a fire safety officer and blah blah — and it’s like $10,000 a day just to arrive there.”

But she adds, “I’d love to shoot a whole movie at that Western town!”

Work and Money

Calvert crafted Season 3 of “Primary,” she explains, as “an exploration of the intersection of work and relationships, and one’s relationship with work and also adjacently with money, and how that affects their relationships.”

As far as the writer-director is concerned, this is part of the show’s overarching purpose: to probe all things poly.

“A lot of conversations right now about poly that are happening on the internet, that are happening in my personal life as well, are like, ‘Does every relationship need to be romantic?’” she explains. “Your relationship with work is another relationship in your life, your relationship with your friends is another relationship in your life. All of these are relationships. Who says that the most important relationship in your life has to be romantic? It might not be. It might be a relationship with yourself.”

As examples, she cites Abigail and Parker, who are doing very well financially.

“Parker got paid a lot of money for this script. Abigail got a promotion. But then Phoebe moved in with them, and one of the reasons why is because it made financial sense. They have a big enough house. She didn’t have to pay rent in her little apartment anymore. They have a lovely spare bedroom with her own bathroom, and it just made sense for Phoebe to move in with them.

“And Eva is also doing very well now financially. She has bought a house. Her influencing, social media, YouTube thing that she’s doing is going really well. She’s saving up to open up her own yoga studio. And that is affecting her relationship with Olivia, who is still broke.”

To Calvert, how work and money change previously established relationships or provide new opportunities all feels like it falls under the very large umbrella of alternative relationships and alternative lifestyles.

“And that’s ‘Primary’ for me,” she concludes. “It’s really a show about love. It’s a show about how people love what’s most important to them.”

Streamster Debuts ‘Business Studio’ Multiple Livestream Tool

Streamster Debuts 'Business Studio' Multiple Livestream Tool

TALLINN, Estonia — Cam platform Streamster has launched its Business Studio multiple-stream too.

The web-based Streamster Business Studio allows users to operate multiple livestreams from a single dashboard.

“Streamster Business Studio represents a result of years of research, development, and dedication from the Streamster tech team,” said a rep. 

Features include the ability to monitor the status of multiple streams from one dashboard, set up multiple livestreams remotely, preview each livestream, and control each livestream remotely, among others.

“The new product is a result of our cooperation with leading cam studios,” said Streamster CEO Sergiy Yashchenko. “Over the years of work on the livestreaming business, we have learned the needs of our customers. We are confident that our new product will empower online modeling businesses to reach new heights, just like other Streamster products already work for independent performers’ success.”

For more information, visit Streamster.io.

Related:  

Honey’s Place Now Distributing Pink Lipstick Lingerie

Honey's Place Now Distributing Pink Lipstick Lingerie

SAN FERNANDO, Calif. — Honey’s Place is now distributing products from intimate apparel company Pink Lipstick Lingerie.

“The well-established line of lingerie is poised to become yet another best-selling offering for Honey’s Place customers,” said a rep.

Honey’s Place Director of Purchasing Kyle Tutino enthused about the partnership.

“Pink Lipstick Lingerie, renowned for its innovative designs and craftsmanship, aligns seamlessly with our standards of curating superior offerings for our Honey’s Place clientele,” Tutino said. “This strategic alignment represents a fusion of two entities committed to delivering excellence in intimate apparel.”

Added Vijay Kamra, sales and operations manager of Pink Lipstick parent company International Intimates, “The entire team of Pink Lipstick at International Intimates is very happy to announce that Honey’s Place is now an authorized distributor for this brand. We wholeheartedly feel that this will go a long way in establishing our brands with customers that Honey’s Place caters to.”

For more information, visit HoneysPlace.

Related:  

Blush Rebrands ‘Loverboy’ Line as ‘Coverboy’

Blush Rebrands 'Loverboy' Line as 'Coverboy'

GARDEN CITY, N.Y. — Blush is rebranding its Loverboy line of dildos and strokers as Coverboy.

“The products will remain the exact same in design, manufacturing, UPCs, and price points – Blush is simply swapping the ‘L’ for a ‘C,'” said a rep. 

According to the company, the new packaging and branding will roll out over the next year.

“It’s official — Loverboy is now Coverboy,” said Blush’s Benny Neff. “We’re excited about this update and how it will even better represent the fun, flirty vibe of Coverboy products. We know how beloved this line is and we want retailers and shoppers alike to rest assured that it is a change in name only. Everything people appreciate about the line will stay the same – these are still the same great products you know and love.”

For more information, visit BlushLove.

Related:  

2023 XBIZ Europa Awards Winners Announced

AMSTERDAM — Tonight, Central European Time, winners of the 2023 XBIZ Europa Awards, presented by F2F.com, were announced during a star-packed ceremony hosted by Jia Lissa and Danny D.

As the capstone event to XBIZ’s fall events series, the XBIZ Europa Awards honor outstanding achievement in the business of pleasure, spanning movie production, digital media, pleasure products and retail.

Stay tuned to XBIZ.com for full coverage of the ceremony.

The 2023 XBIZ Europa Awards winners are:

MOVIES & PRODUCTION

Feature Movie of the Year
The Wedding (Lust Cinema)

Glamcore Movie of the Year
24 Hours (Vixen)

Gonzo Movie of the Year
Rocco’s Sex Clinic: Treatment 6 (Evil Angel)

Director of the Year
Julia Grandi

Female Performer of the Year
Tiffany Tatum

Male Performer of the Year
Christian Clay

Gay Performer of the Year
Bastian Karim

Best New Performer
Kelly Collins

Best Acting
Nicole Kitt, The Wedding (Lust Cinema)

Best Sex Scene — Feature
Lana Wolf & Danny D, Pornstars in Space (Digital Playground)

Best Sex Scene — Glamcore
Rae Lil Black, Agatha Vega & Alberto Blanco, 24 Hours (Vixen)

Best Sex Scene — Gonzo
Jia Lissa & Christian Clay, Irresistible Impulse, Jia Lissa & Christian Clay (Tushy Raw)

Best Sex Scene — Lesbian
Amirah Adara, Veronica Leal & Tiffany Tatum, Marla (Parasited)

Studio of the Year
Dorcel

Global Studio Brand of the Year
Vixen Media Group

WEB & TECHNOLOGY

Paysite Network/Company of the Year
PayBig

Cam Affiliate Program of the Year
Stripcash

Payment Services Company of the Year
Vendo

Traffic Services Company of the Year
Traffic Factory

Web Services Company of the Year
Adult-HTML

Emerging Web Brand of the Year
F2F.com

Global Web Brand of the Year
Streamate

Cam Model of the Year
Jessica D.

Clip Artist of the Year
Reislin

Premium Social Media Star of the Year
Rebecca Goodwin

Creator Platform of the Year
LoyalFans.com

Cam Site of the Year
BongaCams.com

Paysite of the Year
LetsDoeIt.com

Performer/Director Site of the Year
ImmoralLive.com

VOD Site of the Year
Erotik.com

Erotic Site of the Year
SexArt.com

Gay Site of the Year
TimTales.com

Virtual Reality Site of the Year
SLROriginals.com

PLEASURE PRODUCTS

Sex Toy of the Year – Powered (Vibrating)
Dot, Lelo

Sex Toy of the Year – Powered (Non-Vibrating)
Wave, Womanizer

Sex Toy of the Year – Non-Powered
Dildolls Utopia, Love to Love

Luxury Brand of the Year
Fun Factory

Innovative Sex Toy of the Year
Keon Sex Machine, Kiiroo

BDSM Pleasure Products Company of the Year
Rouge Garments

Fetish Product/Line of the Year
Blaze, DreamToys

Queer Pleasure Products Brand of the Year
Prowler

Lubricant Company of the Year
pjur group

Lingerie Company of the Year
Patrice Catanzaro

Excellence in Product Packaging
Gvibe

New Pleasure Brand of the Year
NIYA, Rocks-Off

Pleasure Products Company of the Year
Satisfyer

Global Pleasure Brand of the Year
Svakom

RETAIL & DISTRIBUTION

Retailer of the Year (10+ Stores)
Christine le Duc

Retailer of the Year (3-9 Stores)
Babylon Love shop

Retailer of the Year (1-2 Stores)
N69.pl

Online Retailer of the Year
easytoys.nl

Online Retailer of the Year (Boutique)
Lulapink.pl

Distributor/Wholesaler of the Year
Orion

Raging Stallion Releases Trailer for Upcoming Horror Thriller ‘Overdrive’

Raging Stallion Releases Trailer for Upcoming Horror Thriller 'Overdrive'

SAN FRANCISCO — Raging Stallion has released a trailer for its upcoming horror thriller, “Overdrive,” co-directed by Steve Cruz and Ben Rush.

The feature stars Falcon/NakedSword exclusive Beau Butler along with Derek Kage, Paul Wagner, Lawson James, Timothy Chance, Brogan, Danny Starr and Sean Xavier.

“When awkward rideshare driver Derek Kage picks up handsome-but-cocky passenger Paul Wagner from a local airport, he can’t ignore his instant physical attraction,” said a rep. “Paul, both turned on by and hesitant about the driver’s intensity — and against his own better judgment — agrees to stop at a vacant nearby garage for a rough flip-fuck with the unstable motorist. As the night draws in, though, Paul grows increasingly uncomfortable with Derek’s obsessive and menacing text messages and calls, immediately filing a grievance with the Let It Ride car service app. Discernibly unhinged and now even more enraged by Paul’s deliberate complaint, Derek begins a deadly and twisted descent into madness that leaves a grisly body count in its horrifying wake.”

“Overdrive” premieres Sept. 29 on RagingStallion and the Falcon/NakedSword store.

Related: