Pork in the Kitchen and Pig in Bed

Dr Jacques COULARDEAU
11 min readOct 2, 2023

JAMON JAMON — 1992

No subtitles but you don’t need any. The situation is tragically simple: three men, three women, and a pentacle of five in the heart of it all.

One young woman is the daughter of an older man. She is desiring the favors — you know the ones — of a second young athletic man who is, in fact, nothing but an opportunistic and dominant male with all females around but with no emotional or sentimental attachment.

Another younger man, definitely less athletic, and definitely sentimentally in love with the first woman, the young one who accepts sex from any man available, including this younger one. But this younger man is jealous, hence hates the athletic young man who is getting the favors of the girl he loves. But it becomes tragic when this younger non-athletic man discovers his own mother, the second woman of the fable is accepting and even looking for the favors you know from the athletic young man. Jealousy then becomes hatred and the desire to kill the athletic young man for daring to touch his own mother. But he is of course defeated, killed in the fight and then everything goes berserk, with a third woman who is not that important in the drama, except that she is apparently attached to the young man who has just been killed. In such situations, there are always some necessary weepers.

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Dr Jacques COULARDEAU
Dr Jacques COULARDEAU

Written by Dr Jacques COULARDEAU

Dr Jacques COULARDEAU, PhD in Germanic Linguistics (University Lille III) and ESP Teaching (University Bordeaux II) has been teaching all types of ESP

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