Summaries

'I know we just met, but will you hold me?' Cuddle parties, snuggle houses, cuddle therapy... from Alabama to Colorado to San Francisco to Wisconsin and to New York, the cuddling movement is growing bigger and bigger and faces an uphill climb in mainstream acceptance. This new documentary explores this revolutionary trend in restoring basic human needs in a world where human touch seems to happen less and less.—Anonymous

Documentary chronicling a unique and revolutionary movement taking place around the world. For years, people have been getting together at cuddle parties, where non-sexual physical touch can be practiced and explored within a safe and innocent setting. In a couple of cities, and most recently, in Madison, Wisconsin, new businesses are opening and facing huge controversy to offer one-on-one snuggling sessions for paying customers... again, in a completely safe and non-sexual environment. In each of these instances, the misconceptions and misunderstandings of others have caused controversy, and have sometimes made it difficult for people to see the benefits that these services and events can provide, and it ends up dealing so much with how we view touch in America and how the lines have blurred between compassion and sex. Can these movements succeed and allow others to see how finding ways to get back to our most basic human needs could actually be a positive step forward for our society? Or will these movements face too much misunderstanding and founder? This new documentary explores it all. Jason first began by covering the return of the Cuddle Party movement in Birmingham, Alabama, interviewing facilitators Tracy and Bryan Gilliom, and a first time Cuddle Party attendee, Kate Donnelly, whose insights and anxiety about attending a cuddle party lend an interesting look into this event that has been around for a number of years. Jason then traveled to Madison, Wisconsin, right in the midst of the huge controversy that erupted around the opening of The Snuggle House, a new business offering one-on-one snuggling services. Self made millionaire Matthew David Hurtado explained his desire to open this new business and the struggles he faced in the city from those who thought it was a front for prostitution. Jason then traveled to Boulder, Colorado, where a man named Chris DeCicco was already operating a one-on-one snuggling business called "Be The Love You Are". Jason was granted unprecedented access, filming many one-on-one snuggling sessions and interviews with snugglers and clients. It was then on to San Francisco to interview a man who founded "Cuddle Therapy" and a woman who helped co-found the Cuddle Party movement almost a decade ago. The travels concluded in New York to interview the innovating woman who first started the one-on-one snuggling business when she opened The Snuggery in Rochester, and a woman about to open up her own cuddling business after having coached women who had not been nurtured by their mothers. Provocative and eye opening, the film presents an insight into a phenomenon desperately searching for mainstream acceptance, as well as working to bring us back to the most basic human needs we all inherently knew from childbirth.—Jason O'Brien

Details

Keywords
  • professional cuddling
Genres
  • Drama
  • Documentary
  • News
Release date Nov 30, 2015
Motion Picture Rating (MPA) Not Rated
Countries of origin United States
Official sites Official site
Language English
Filming locations Birmingham, Alabama, USA
Production companies Fast Lane Productions

Box office

Tech specs

Runtime 1h 7m
Color Color
Aspect ratio

Synopsis

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