Michael Lucas' La Dolce Vita

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Michael Lucas' La Dolce Vita
Directed by Michael Lucas & Tony Dimarco
Produced by Michael Lucas
Written by Tony Dimarco
Starring Michael Lucas
Music by Nekked
Editing by Frank Tyler
Distributed by Lucas Distribution
Release date(s) 2006
Country USA
Language English

Michael Lucas' La Dolce Vita is a gay pornographic remake of the Federico Fellini classic La dolce vita, [1] directed by Michael Lucas and Tony Dimarco and released by Lucas Entertainment in 2006.

In 2007 at the GayVN's in San Francisco, it won all 14 awards it was nominated for, including best picture, best director (Michael Lucas & Tony DiMarco), best threesome (Michael Lucas, Derrick Hanson, and Jason Ridge), best actor (Michael Lucas) and best non-sexual performance (Savanna Samson).

The film stars Michael Lucas, Jason Ridge, Chad Hunt, Cole Ryan, Pete Ross, Derrick Hanson, Ray Star, Brad Star, Jack Bond, Wilson Vasquez, Jonathan Vargas, Ben Andrews, and more. It features non-sexual cameos by Savanna Samson, Kevin Aviance, Amanda Lepore, Heather Fink and Johnny Hanson.

Contents

[edit] Cast

[edit] Cameos (non-sexual)

[edit] Awards

[edit] Issues of trademark and copyright infringement

Lucas Entertainment, Inc., Lucas Distribution, Inc., and Andrei Treivas Bregman p/k/a Michael Lucas were named as defendants in a lawsuit filed by International Media Films, Inc. in February 2007. The suit, filed in New York Southern District Court, alleges the defendants engaged in willful trademark and copyright infringement and that their actions "have, are, and will continue to infringe, tarnish, and dilute...the La Dolce Vita mark."[2] International Media Films owns the rights to Fellini's La Dolce Vita.[3] The suit also seeks to collect unspecified damages and to stop sales of Michael Lucas' La Dolce Vita Parts 1 & 2.[4] In May of 2007, a Manhattan federal judge rejected the request to enjoin the sales of Lucas' film, primarily on the grounds of "inexcusable delay" on the plaintiff's part. The judge noted that there were serious issues raised regarding trademark infringement or tarnishment, but also wrote that it "seems extremely unlikely that a hapless purchaser seeking to buy Fellini’s film will inadvertently stumble across Michael Lucas’s La Dolce Vita”, which would be an important element in proving IMF's case.[3]

[edit] References