Pirates exists primarily as a parody of Disney’s Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl (2003). However, unlike the low-budget "spoof" parodies that flooded the market in the late 2000s, Pirates engaged in high-fidelity emulation. The filmmakers utilized high-definition cameras (the HDW-F900, the same used by George Lucas for Star Wars: Episode II ) and invested over $1 million in production—a staggering sum for the industry at the time.
. These films are frequently cited as the most expensive productions in adult film history, noted for bringing Hollywood-level production values to the genre. Production & "Mainstream" Ambitions The studio, Digital Playground , positioned
As long as the digital playground has locked gates and broken equipment, the pirates will climb the fence. The question for the entertainment industry is not how to stop them , but how to build a playground so good that no one wants to escape.
Pirates exists primarily as a parody of Disney’s Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl (2003). However, unlike the low-budget "spoof" parodies that flooded the market in the late 2000s, Pirates engaged in high-fidelity emulation. The filmmakers utilized high-definition cameras (the HDW-F900, the same used by George Lucas for Star Wars: Episode II ) and invested over $1 million in production—a staggering sum for the industry at the time.
. These films are frequently cited as the most expensive productions in adult film history, noted for bringing Hollywood-level production values to the genre. Production & "Mainstream" Ambitions The studio, Digital Playground , positioned
As long as the digital playground has locked gates and broken equipment, the pirates will climb the fence. The question for the entertainment industry is not how to stop them , but how to build a playground so good that no one wants to escape.