‘Teenage Sex and Death at Camp Miasma’ Director & Cast Set ‘Secretary’ Live Reading
Nearly 25 years, Secretary will get a one-night-only revival by the director and cast of another erotic title, thanks to Film Independent and Mubi. Jane Schoenbrun, writer/director of Teenage Sex and
Nearly 25 years, Secretary will get a one-night-only revival by the director and cast of another erotic title, thanks to Film Independent and Mubi. Ja
Read Full Story at Deadline Hollywood →Why This Matters
The convergence of two erotic films in a live reading signals a bold reimagining of how cult cinema can transcend its original medium. It reflects a growing appetite for immersive, interactive experiences that challenge traditional boundaries between film and performance, particularly in genres often marginalized by mainstream awards circuits.
Background Context
Steven Shainberg’s *Secretary* (2002) emerged during a period when erotic dramas were cautiously navigating post-*9/11* cultural anxieties, blending kink with workplace power dynamics—a subversive twist that tested censorship limits. Meanwhile, Jane Schoenbrun’s *Teenage Sex and Death at Camp Miasma* represents a newer wave of queer, genre-blending storytelling that rejects sanitized coming-of-age narratives in favor of raw, unflinching exploration.
What Happens Next
Should the live reading generate buzz, it could pave the way for more cross-pollination between genre films and experimental screenings, especially as platforms like Mubi expand their curatorial reach. The collaboration also raises questions about whether such events will remain one-off spectacles or evolve into a new model for reviving mid-tier erotic cinema that lacks streaming visibility.
Bigger Picture
This pairing underscores a broader trend where niche, thematically risky films are finding renewed life through unconventional platforms and hybrid formats. It mirrors the rise of "slow cinema" and immersive theater, where audiences crave experiences that demand active participation rather than passive consumption—even in genres traditionally dismissed as disposable.

