Suburbia Confidential 〈HIGH-QUALITY – 2025〉

Advertised as starting "where the Kinsey Report left off," it features then-taboo subjects such as bondage, lesbianism, and transvestism. Reviews often highlight its "playful sexiness" and the unusual lack of moral punishment for the women involved.

"Suburbia Confidential" (1966) is a notable entry in the mid-1960s "sexploitation" film genre, later adapted into a novel by the infamous filmmaker . The project is a primary example of the "White Coater" subgenre, which used a thin veneer of psychiatric or educational authority to present salacious content for adult audiences. Film Overview (1966) Suburbia Confidential

Original paperback editions (such as from Triumph Fiction Books ) used sensationalist taglines promising "vice, decadence, and depraved orgies". Advertised as starting "where the Kinsey Report left

A psychiatrist, Dr. Henri Legrand, reviews case files of "sexually frustrated" suburban housewives who engage in affairs with service workers like milkmen, television repairmen, and bellboys. The project is a primary example of the

Advertised as starting "where the Kinsey Report left off," it features then-taboo subjects such as bondage, lesbianism, and transvestism. Reviews often highlight its "playful sexiness" and the unusual lack of moral punishment for the women involved.

"Suburbia Confidential" (1966) is a notable entry in the mid-1960s "sexploitation" film genre, later adapted into a novel by the infamous filmmaker . The project is a primary example of the "White Coater" subgenre, which used a thin veneer of psychiatric or educational authority to present salacious content for adult audiences. Film Overview (1966)

Original paperback editions (such as from Triumph Fiction Books ) used sensationalist taglines promising "vice, decadence, and depraved orgies".

A psychiatrist, Dr. Henri Legrand, reviews case files of "sexually frustrated" suburban housewives who engage in affairs with service workers like milkmen, television repairmen, and bellboys.