It’s not just Gary
Glitter who discovered that a) the Net was there to cater for all sorts of
whims and b) you should definitely do any hard disc repairs yourself. As the
availability of PCs and web-access increases ever more, people with fetishes
they consider less than normal (a relative term if there’s ever been one) are
discovering they’re not alone, and that the Global Village contains maybe just
a few like-minded yokels. And no, we’re not talking about people who value
interesting views through coffee tables here. Now that really is weird.
Games
of ‘bang-bang-you’re-dead’ played a part in many childrens’ early days, and
while in these post-Michael Ryan times it’s a form of recreation now on a par
with the dodgier version of doctors and nurses (you know, the one where they
shag, rather than complain about lack of staff and funding), it’s no surprise
that for a small minority this informed embryonic sexualities. Before the Net
this would have resulted in a few solitary people who considered themselves
stranger than most, mainly men who got off on tiny parts of Argento films, or
women who imagined being discovered sprawled dead while covered in gold paint.
But now there is worldwide communication; there is the discovery (as with many
of the self-perceived extreme fetishes) that people are not alone. And, yes,
there are the websites.
The Death Fetish has a variety of
representations, depending on a wide range of factors. It’s difficult to make
absolute statements about any of the people involved, and pinning them down to
definite demographics is nigh on impossible. Yes, most of the women involved in
the scene fantasize about being dead, but for every one who wants to be hacked
apart by a mask-faced serial killer, there’s another who just wants to be
discovered after some fatal domestic accident and then lovingly fucked by a
partner. And yes, most of the men want to be the killers, but for every one who
wants to gently asphyxiate a naked woman, there’s another who gets his rocks
off from machine-gunning a jacuzzi full of bikini models. The Death Fetish is a
particularly large umbrella, and those sheltering beneath it often have more
differences than things in common, which makes for an interestingly divisive
community with more flames than the Outback in the dry season.
The Web content of all this began in
the mid-90s, with a newsgroup comprised of a few souls who’d managed to
discover their crucial similarity. In 1996 the first actual website was formed
– Necrobabes - run by a Washington-dwelling woman named Vicki. Had she not been
brave enough to not only start the site but put up images of herself in
various death poses, it’s
possible this trend would have (ahem) died here. Certainly it gave her an accessibility
– this was a real person practicing what she preached, rather than a website
being set up by an opportunistic adult company – which gave people the courage
to pay up and become members. It also meant that Vicki’s job and marriage were
put at risk, and that she became the focus of much unwanted attention from men
who define their ideal relationship as one in which the partner dies at the
click of the fingers. Somewhat unsurprisingly, although Necrobabes continues to
go strong, Vicki’s role is now considerably more background.
As its name might suggest, the
Necrobabes site was founded for those into fantasy Necrophilia. Vidcaps of
movie morgue scenes were popular, stories were written and shared, the message
board got bigger, and eventually photostories were commissioned with glamour
models and ‘adult entertainers’ hired to pose. The IRC chatroom for the site
became a popular place to come and play. Or indeed vice versa. But Vicki was
also into the fantasy of being killed (her pre-Columbine website details
fantasies of being killed as a spy or soldier, Native American massacres,
workplace gun sprees and so on) and as this aspect started to appear in
Necrobabes, the dynamic began to shift. Many who’d been dissuaded by the
fantasy Necro aspect (that joke about ‘some rotten **** splitting on me’ is
never far away, is it?), or who simply just fantasised about killing, were
suddenly attracted, and as the Necro aspect itself became less prominent, the
membership increased massively.
This is where interests began to
diverge, and resulted in the creation of a number of spin-off sites. For a
start, those more into what happened after
death than the act of killing itself began to feel they were being left behind.
If they were lucky, a photoset had some handling or stripping after the death,
but that was about it. In the other camp, few were happy with the deaths
themselves, which is where it became clear that while many there were into roughly the same thing, they were
different enough for it to cause problems. For example, shooting has its fans –
unsurprising, seeing as many were turned onto this fetish by scenes in 70s’ cop
and spy shows (Kojak and The Man From Uncle often quoted inspirations) as well
as war movies and Bond. Knifings are a close second (all those hack-n-slash 80s
films), with asphyxia not far behind. To this add the other interests:
decapitation, electrocution, cannibalism, death-by-shark, and it’s soon clear
that although as an abstract concept the Death Fetish is shared by a group of
people, the specifics vary wildly. And even then we’re not through: the
shooters will disagree wildly over where
to shoot (head-shots or stomach hits?), the stabbers aren’t sure what weapon to
use, and there’s no consensus about whether a body’s eyes should be open, or
the tongue hanging out.
Naturally
enough, no one wants to be linked to this fetish. Everyone’s there under
assumed names, and attempts in recent times to make the memberships more
accountable (to prevent anonymous posters sparking flame wars) have been resisted
simply because they might make it possible to trace people. It’s interesting to
note that the phenomenon is acknowledged
beyond these websites. A recent Cosmopolitan interview with a Hollywood madam
spoke of a successful male actor who pays to have sex with call girls who have
to play dead the entire time. There have been suggestions that singer Sheryl
Crow might have leanings in this direction, with her cameo in The Minus Man
ending in death, Tomorrow Never Dies lyrics (‘Darling I’m killed, I’m in a
puddle on the floor, Waiting for you to return’) and several Necro poses in
videos, though it’s all circumstantial and – in the main – wishful thinking.
Even the work of some directors has come in for scrutiny, with suspicions that
B-movie man Andy Sidaris has indicated Death Fetish leanings in many of his
boobs-out Bond parodies.
Even
in the brightest of times, there’s a sense of guilt lurking in the background
of the message boards and stories. What had started off as a single woman’s
interest has been taken over by the male membership and they’re not entirely
sure what to make of it now they’re the majority. One of the most common
postings is that ‘we respect and love women’ although you would argue that
fantasizing about killing and then screwing someone is registering rather low
in both areas. Many of the stories (both textual and photo) have the victims
drawn as hookers, femme fatales, drug dealers, spies or bad girls, so that the
murder aspect has an aspect of justice which absolves these feelings. Whenever
the real world looms into these fantasies, the responses are always the
passionately-stung reactions of the guilty-minded. For example, Columbine
resulted in near radio silence on the boards for weeks after, and the presence
of accounts/links about real world deaths (actual crime scene images, for
example, or Jill Dando’s death, or shot policewoman Yvonne Fletcher) results in
the sort of flaming not seen since London of 1666. There was, however, worse to
come.
With mainstream film and TV coming
under ever-increasing fire (excuse the pun) for any violence they portray –
especially with George W jumping on the bandwagon pre-election – and moves to
restrict material on the Internet all the time, obtaining new material is
becoming difficult, and serving to strengthen the feeling within the community
that society is Clearly Against fantasies like this. Twenty years ago shows
such as Mike Hammer or even Hart to Hart were a source of furtive delight to
those into aspects of Death Fetish. Now, the enthusiasm which greets the report
of a moment in Xena or X-Files indicates how rare these sequences have become.
Indeed, it’s the ‘if you want something done, do it yourself’ dynamic this
created which has led to a number of the sites working to make such moments easier
to find. Several contain MPEG libraries of death scene clips, from the swimming
pool massacre of Magnum Force to death-by-broadsword in Hercules, while others
have utilised the power of the PC to provide images created entirely by
computer graphics, or custom scenes filmed using a combination of both old and
digital techniques and then distributed electronically.
It was in late 1999 that police
raided and arrested two Canadian brothers who had been filming scenes for sale
through their own website. Their technique – the digital alteration of frames
of custom-filmed footage – had created some incredibly realistic death scenes,
and the site was doing a good trade in them. The raid was supposedly actioned
when rumours of snuff movie making arose (despite several clips using the same
model!), but this then mutated into charges of Hate Crime against women when
the initial reasons fell apart. As accusations of police harassment were
bounced around, the brothers found publicity deliberately being brought to bear
on them such that family and friends were all made aware of what the police
felt they’d been doing. Ironically, the server was located in the States and so
– protected by freedom of expression laws – couldn’t be shut down, allowing
this ‘evil’ site to get ever increasing hits as news spread. It’s not quite
accurate to say that you can’t buy that kind of publicity; it just costs your
entire social life.
Most interesting to note however was
the Death Fetish community’s reactions to this attack against one of their
number: it resulted in the sort of embarrassed silence you normally associate
with a fart in a lift. Although a few people (largely people in charge of
similar sites) started talking about Freedoms and Amendments, what became clear
is that the strength of interest in pretend death is matched only by the sheer
horror of being revealed as interested in it. It’s not often you get to see
someone else experiencing your worst nightmare first hand, and the incident
dominated all the sites for months. Even now, well over a year later, there’s a
muted quality to what used to be boundless enthusiasm, and a suspicion of the
future and all it holds. It gives a good idea of how much these people view
themselves at the extreme-taboo end of the Fetish spectrum. Certainly it’s
something you wouldn’t bring up in conversation (“Hi babe, fancy coming back to
my place and lying on the bed with ketchup coming out of your mouth?”), and
even those involved who are married or in stable relationships have rarely told
their other half for fear of how it would be perceived.
Of course, being based on the Net
presents that central dilemma; of wanting to have new blood (okay, so we won’t
even ask for forgiveness on that one) but not wanting to be found out; a
best-kept secret that you want more people to know. It’s ironic that something
with its roots in games that many of us played is now seen as very, very
wrong, so totallyevil. One’s tempted to suggest that the anti-violence moves
in present day society are reaching further than we suspect, such that now even
the thought of it is wrong.
Alternatively, it could be that anti-misogynist measures are finally finding
the right people and all their freedom of expression stuff is just guff. Who’d
ever have thought that ‘bang bang you’re dead’ would ever get so complicated?
["William Blake"]
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