Deep Throat | Part Ii

| Feature | Deep Throat (1972) | Deep Throat Part II (1974) | | :--- | :--- | :--- | | | Linda Lovelace (real person) | Linda Lovelace (stage name, different actress) | | Director | Gerard Damiano | Joseph W. Sarno (billed as "Joe Sarno") | | Aesthetic | Gritty, documentary-style realism | Cheap, glossy, sci-fi/comedy hybrid | | Cultural Hook | Scandal, obscenity trials, "porno chic" | Attempted franchise-building, post-Watergate puns | | Sex Scenes | Integrated into a single, central gimmick | Disjointed, often dream-sequence or computer-generated excuses |

Introduction: The Sequel No One Asked For, But Everyone Got Deep Throat Part II

The original Deep Throat (1972) wasn't just an adult film; it was a societal hand grenade. It catapulted pornography into the mainstream conversation, triggered obscenity trials, and became a symbol of the sexual revolution’s excesses and hypocrisies. Star Linda Lovelace became an unlikely celebrity. So, a sequel was inevitable. Released in 1974, Deep Throat Part II arrived with almost no involvement from the original team, a different star, and a bizarre new premise. It is less a continuation and more a fascinating artifact of how quickly the adult industry attempted to institutionalize its own history. | Feature | Deep Throat (1972) | Deep