SCREW Of The Day: Elloise


SCREW Of The Day: Elloise

Licking a lollipop is just a preview for Elloise, who likes to make her intentions clear even as she’s stripping out of her clothes and playing the sticky sweet all over her soft skin. Once she’s nude and all revved up for a good time, this hotblooded babe can’t keep her hands from her tits and clit.


TAKE ME TO YOUR STRIPPER


TAKE ME TO YOUR STRIPPER

Kiss Me Quick! (1964) arrived during the peak of the 1960s nudie-cutie boom, when movies existed solely to put naked women on screen and call it a plot. It’s cheap, stupid, and completely honest about why it was made. Director Peter Perry Jr., working under a pseudonym, didn’t pretend he was making art. He was making a skin flick with a gimmick, and the gimmick was sci-fi.


LOLITA (1962): KUBRICK GETS AWAY WITH IT


LOLITA: KUBRICK GETS AWAY WITH IT

Stanley Kubrick’s Lolita (1962) is a film everyone understands but very few people want to talk about honestly. It tells a story Hollywood wasn’t supposed to tell, about desires it’d rather pretend don’t exist.


QUIZ: Are You a MAGA Cocksucker?


QUIZ: How MAGA Are You?

Are you down with the MAGAs? Whether you’re a card-carrying member of the Ku Klux Kid Rock fan club or secretly worried everything is turning gay, this quiz will test your level of loyalty and commitment to Supreme Leader.


Five Best Lesbian Scenes of 2025


Five Best Lesbian Scenes of 2025

Lez be real, there’s nothing better than a good ol’ fashioned lesbian scene, and in 2025, some of Hollywood’s brightest stars explored their sapphic sides on camera, including Daisy Edgar-Jones and Sasha Calle in On Swift HorsesAudrey AvilaDenise Esteban, and Dani Yoshida in BelyasLaura Londoño and Carmen Villalobos in The GuestMargaret Qualley and Aubrey Plaza in Honey Don’t, and Malin Åkerman and Brittany Snow in The Hunting Wives!


ABOUT US

SCREW is an adult culture and entertainment magazine covering sex news, satire, adult film reviews, celebrities, vintage erotica history, nightlife, and uncensored commentary. Founded in 1968 by Al Goldstein and revived for a digital audience by Phil Italiano, SCREW publishes original features, cultural criticism, event guides, and archival stories from the filth-and-free-speech tradition.