Taboo American Style Part2-raven- Gloria Leonard- Apr 2026
★★★★☆ (4/5) For the unflinching psychological realism and the unforgettable sight of Gloria Leonard playing chess while a world burns around her.
This segment lives or dies on the chemistry between its two leads, and it delivers a slow-burn masterclass. Leonard, in her mid-40s at the time, commands every frame with a pantherine grace. Her voice—that legendary, whiskey-and-cigarettes alto—turns mundane phrases into threats and promises. When she explains the "rules" of her house to Nikki, there is no coercion, only the terrifying power of absolute confidence. Taboo American Style Part2-Raven- Gloria Leonard-
Following the incendiary success of the first installment, Taboo: American Style Part 2 doubles down on its thesis: that the most dangerous taboos aren't found in dark alleys, but in the well-lit living rooms of the American suburbs. While the original film shocked audiences with its nuclear family transgression, this sequel pivots to a more psychologically complex—and arguably more unsettling—dynamic, anchored by the formidable pairing of Raven and Golden Age legend Gloria Leonard. While the original film shocked audiences with its
Taboo: American Style Part 2 (Raven/Leonard segment) is not for the casual viewer seeking nostalgia. It is difficult, uncomfortable cinema that uses the adult film format to explore genuine pathologies of control, loneliness, and inherited trauma. Leonard proves she was far more than a porn star—she was a noir villainess trapped in the wrong genre. Raven, often overlooked in the canon, delivers a career-best performance as the lamb who volunteers for the slaughter. and finally to a shattering
The physical culmination of their story is notable for its emotional brutality as much as its eroticism. It is shot with a claustrophobic intensity, alternating between Leonard’s detached, instructional guidance and Raven’s raw, almost painful surrender. It is not romantic. It is transactional, hungry, and deeply melancholic. Leonard remains the unshakeable sun in this universe; Raven is the comet that burns up on approach.
Raven, by contrast, is all nervous energy and quickened breath. She plays Nikki with a convincing arc: from genuine fright to hesitant fascination, and finally to a shattering, desperate abandon. The film’s pivotal scene is not a sex scene, but a conversation on a velvet settee where Barbara calmly outlines her philosophy: “Desire doesn’t have a family tree, darling. Only fear does.” Watching Raven’s character process—and accept—this logic is genuinely affecting.