The Citizen (KZN)

Courageous documentar­y

- Thami Kwazi

The year is 1976 and Jewish couple Karen and Barry Mason run a bookstore called the Circus Of Books, a highly profitable enterprise that sold gay porn and sex toys.

They acquired the store from someone who owed the landlord rent money due to his drug habit.

Barry, a former movie studio employee and inventor who’s fallen on hard times, takes over the running of the store and it becomes a cult success in the gay community.

On the surface, Karen is highly conservati­ve and described as the one in the couple who wears the pants.

She enjoys being in the synagogue praying, while Barry is all about business and not deeply spiritual. It’s a highly confusing and interestin­g dynamic.

The ’80s and ’90s were a period where the distributi­on of homosexual porn was illegal in America.

Running the most successful gay porn store was viewed as part of the counter culture, in a climate where owning such a business could get you locked up in prison as a federal crime.

Written and directed by their daughter Rachel Mason, the Netflix doccie additional­ly documents the couple’s children not being privy to the nature of their parents’ business.

The couple escape prison through the election of Bill Clinton and by using their first amendment right, part of which states “Congress shall make no law respecting an establishm­ent of religion, or prohibitin­g the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech”.

Through the years, the store starts to suffer financiall­y because the customer base is ageing and porn is distribute­d through other channels which include the digital world.

The couple failed to adapt which eventually leads to the demise of their business.

As you watch the documentar­y, several events take place.

The couple’s son, Josh, who had sworn he’d marry and had never visited their store, tells his story of coming out to his parents as gay on a post-it note that he places on the dining room table.

Karen doesn’t take the reveal too well but Barry describes his son’s confession as “not making a difference to him”.

A confession that Karen makes in the documentar­y is coming face-to-face with her internal prejudice towards homosexual­ity and having to fix the way she views things.

She begins to a theologica­l struggle with what she’s been taught through religion, even joining a support group that helps her work through gender issues and helps her get comfortabl­e with her son’s sexuality.

Karen even becomes a facilitato­r in the group, helping and encouragin­g other families with gender acceptance.

It is a courageous documentar­y offers insight that not many know or talk about.

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