The scene opens with a police interrogation room aesthetic—a Pure Taboo signature. Jaye Summers plays "Kayla," a young woman in her late teens, sitting across from an off-camera detective (voice only). She is recounting a specific afternoon spent with her "Uncle Mark" (Tommy Pistol), a man who has been a recurring figure in her life. Through voiceover and flashback, we learn that Kayla’s parents have left her in Uncle Mark’s care for the weekend. What begins as seemingly ordinary—watching TV, sharing snacks—slowly reveals Uncle Mark’s calculated manipulation. He tests boundaries through seemingly innocent physical contact, guilt-inducing language about "family secrets," and eventually escalates to sexual coercion. The twist, as with many Pure Taboo releases, comes in the final moments when the interrogation’s true context is revealed, subverting the viewer’s initial assumptions about who is the victim and who holds power.
By late 2017, Pure Taboo had firmly established itself as a standout niche brand within premium adult entertainment. Unlike mainstream gonzo or feature-lite productions, Pure Taboo specializes in high-concept, psychologically intense narratives that lean heavily into discomfort, power imbalance, and dramatic tension. Their hallmark is a dark, cinematic aesthetic—desaturated color grading, moody lighting, and a haunting ambient score—coupled with a distinct cold open and epilogue structure that often reframes the entire scene as a memory, confession, or interrogation.
PureTaboo.17.11.14 – Jaye Summers "The Bad Uncle" is a difficult, intentionally uncomfortable piece of narrative adult content. It succeeds on its own terms: as a psychological thriller about grooming and familial coercion. The performances are strong, the direction is purposeful, and the production quality is high. However, it is not for everyone. Viewers seeking traditional eroticism will be baffled or repelled. Those interested in the intersection of adult film and social commentary—and who can engage critically with ethically fraught material—will find a disturbing but well-crafted short film. puretaboo.17.11.14.jaye.summers.the.bad.uncle
Pure Taboo (Adult Time / Gamma Entertainment) Release Date: November 14, 2017 Director: Craven Moorehead (known for psychological, narrative-driven taboo content) Starring: Jaye Summers, Tommy Pistol
Jaye Summers, early in her career here, delivers a remarkably nuanced performance. She is tasked with portraying a young woman oscillating between childlike trust, confusion, dawning horror, and learned helplessness. Summers excels in micro-expressions: the hesitant half-smile when Uncle Mark compliments her, the subtle flinch at an unwanted touch she feels she cannot object to, and the dead-eyed dissociation during the sexual acts. Her vocal work—from bright, chatty teenager to nearly mute compliance—is particularly effective. She never plays "seductive"; she plays survival . This is not a performer enjoying a taboo fantasy; it is an actor simulating the freeze response of a real victim. For viewers sensitive to realism, her performance can be genuinely unsettling. The scene opens with a police interrogation room
No review is complete without critique. First, the pacing is glacial for the first 12 minutes. While deliberate, some viewers may find the repetitive dialogue (Uncle Mark rephrasing the same three manipulative statements) tedious rather than tense. Second, Tommy Pistol’s character is given no backstory—why is he this way? Pure Taboo sometimes includes a motive (e.g., a character’s own abuse history), but here, he remains a functional monster, which some may find less interesting. Third, the sexual mechanics, while intentionally unerotic, feel choreographed in a way that slightly breaks realism—positions shift too neatly for camera coverage. Finally, the epilogue twist, while clever, arguably undermines the earlier social message by introducing a thriller element that some might call exploitative.
A Harrowing Dive into Forbidden Dynamics: Review of PureTaboo.17.11.14 – Jaye Summers "The Bad Uncle" Through voiceover and flashback, we learn that Kayla’s
4/5 Caution: Contains themes of coercion, power abuse, and psychological manipulation. Not suitable for viewers with related trauma.