Soft On Demand

Soft On Demand
Industry Pornography
Founded 1995
Founder Ganari Takahashi
Headquarters Nakano, Tokyo, Japan
Products Pornographic films
Number of employees
128
Website www.sod.co.jp

Soft On Demand (ソフト・オン・デマンド Sofuto On Demando), often known as SOD, is a Japanese adult video group of companies which has its headquarters in the Nakano ward of Tokyo. SOD was founded in December 1995[1] by Ganari Takahashi, who retired from the company in March 2005 and is currently working in agriculture.[2] The company is one of the largest adult video companies in Japan and is notable for its creative approach to adult videos.[3]

Company information

Finances

In 2009, the company, under president Chie Sugawara (菅原 千恵), had 128 employees (27 male and 101 female) and a capital of 100 million yen (about US$1.1 million). For the fiscal year ending March 31, 2009, SOD had total sales of 14.9 billion yen (about US$165 million) and a profit of 670 million yen (about US$7.4 million). For 2007 the figures were sales of 13.5 billion yen (about US$120 million) and profit of 900 million yen (about US$8 million). SOD has been a fast-growing company since its foundation, going from sales of 300 million yen in 1996 to 1.5 billion in 1998 to 4.1 billion in 2000, 7.8 billion in 2003, and 9 billion in 2005.[1] In spite of its rapid growth, it was overtaken in sales volume in the early 2000s by rival AV producer Hokuto, which also absorbed some of SOD's former companies. After peaking in 2008, Hokuto sales have plunged while annual income at SOD has stayed level at about 15 billion yen (about US$150 million) for the 2008-2010 period allowing it to become once again the largest adult video group in Japan.[4]

Products

One director has described their product this way: "SOD's porno is ridiculous. There's nothing really sordid about it" and "different to anything else in the porno world". Some of its most notable approaches have been quiz shows that tested the knowledge of AV (adult video) actresses with challenging questions, CFNM (clothed female, naked male) videos that have women studying a man's penis (the "Uniforms, Undies and All Naked School Multi-Story" series), and plots where women are put under hypnosis. There have also been nude sports series, the senior citizen epic "All Naked Nursing Home for the Elderly", Company Sex Parties, Summer Festivals (a festival focused on penises and not to be confused with the actual Shinto festival dealing with fertility) and Sex Camps.[5]

One of their releases from May 2006, 500 Person Sex (500人SEX),[6] features 250 couples having sex (apart from each other but in the same room) in an impressive synchronized way, and thus got some raised eyebrows from occidental adult sites.[7] The video received a special jury award at the 2006 AV Open.[8]

By 2003, SOD was releasing more than 1,000 adult video titles per year.[9] SOD also works with a number of companies in other areas and has thus become a group (zaibatsu) of companies mainly in the area of producing adult videos. Besides producing videos the company also produces condoms and lubricant lotions,[10][11] PC games (aka hentai games), and adult anime.[12]

Outside of the adult area, SOD is also involved in producing softcore and genre movies,[13] idol videos and TV programs. Among their mainstream movies, some have featured SOD AV actresses including the 2008 horror film Yoroi Samurai Zombie with Nana Natsume[14] and the 2006 comedy-drama Tokyo Daigaku Monogatari, directed by Tatsuya Egawa and featuring Sasa Handa.[15] A third entry was the 2014 science fiction film Danger Dolls, with SOD star Mana Sakura making an appearance.[16]

In 2004, the company announced plans to produce an adaptation of the Shougakukan Big Comic Original manga series Ajisai no Uta (Song of Hydrangea) as an original video animation (OAV) for a general audience.[17][18] Volume 1 of the series was released in August 2004 and the fourth and final volume came out in December of that year.[19]

SOD Create

Internally, SOD outsources work to its individual units, original video production being done by SOD Create Inc. (SODクリエイト株式会社) headed by Daisuke Kasai (葛西 大祐).[1] This affiliate, founded in March 1999, was originally called Hamlet (ハムレット Hamuretto) and changed its name to SOD Create in 2001.[1][20]

Package design for SOD is the realm of another division, SOD Artworks (SODアートワークス), founded in 2004, and under the leadership of Yoshino Toshimitsu (吉野敏充).[1]

Labels

In addition to the SOD label, SOD Create has produced videos under the following labels:[21]

  • Eighteen
  • ON
  • Otis
  • Princess
  • SOD Cinderella
  • Senz
  • Star

Directors

Directors who have worked at SOD include:

Actresses

Many well-known AV Idols have performed for SOD:

Series

Important thematic series at SOD include:[21]

STOP! STD

For the past several years, SOD has run a campaign to bring attention to the rise of sexually transmitted diseases (STD) in Japan and to increase the use of condoms. The program, called STOP! STD, has used former SOD star Nana Natsume as a spokeswoman.[22]

SOD AV Awards & the AV Open

From 2002 to 2006, the company held the SOD AV Awards, an annual ceremony to present a series of awards to honor actresses, directors, and staff of companies in the SOD group. In 2006, the company also sponsored, along with Tokyo Sports, a wider award contest called the AV Open. Sixteen companies competed for a total prize pool of 25 Million yen with the winner being decided by sales of the videos entered in the contest.[23]

In the second year of the AV Open competition, 19 companies participated and the SOD entry won by a large margin. But it was subsequently discovered that SOD had used company funds to buy thousands of their own videos. SOD was disqualified and the discredited AV Open was replaced the next year by the Hokuto Corporation sponsored AV Grand Prix.[23]

Content Soft Association

The Japanese AV industry has several different "ethics groups", which are voluntary organizations to assure adherence with Japanese pornography laws and to regulate content and copyrights. The earliest of these organizations was founded by the major AV companies in 1972 and is known in English as the Nihon Ethics of Video Association (NEVA) or in Japanese, Nippon Video Rinri Kyōkai (日本ビデオ倫理協会 "Japan Video Morality Association"), usually abbreviated as "Biderin" or "Viderin" (ビデ倫).[24][25] In response, SOD in 1996 began its own regulatory group known as the Media Ethics Association (Media Rinri Kyōkai or メディア倫理協会), usually abbreviated as Medirin(メディ倫). Medirin was composed of "indie" companies, independent AV studios which explored porn themes forbidden by NEVA rules and which used a smaller-pixeled censorship mosaic for their videos.[24] Medirin was re-organized in 2005 to form the Content Soft Association (CSA), called in Japanese Content Soft Kyōdō Kumiai (コンテンツ・ソフト協同組合 "Software Content Association"), to review and regulate adult videos and adult game software.[26] The CSA has more than 65 members among AV producers comprising most of the SOD group and some other major companies. Members include:[27]

  • SOD
  • Akinori
  • APA
  • Aroma Planning
  • CineMagic
  • Deep's
  • Global Media Entertainment
  • Glory Quest
  • Hayabusa Agency
  • Hibino
  • IEnergy
  • LadyxLady
  • Natural High
  • Rocket
  • Sadistic Village
  • Shima Planning
  • Style Art
  • V&R Products

Companies in the SOD group

This is a list of the companies that were part of the SOD group as of June 2010.[28]

Companies that have left the SOD group

Notes

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 "SOD Company Data" (in Japanese). SOD. Retrieved 2008-12-09.
  2. Connell, Ryann (February 26, 2007). "Japan's king of porn gets his hands dirty once again -- on the farm". Archived from the original on May 14, 2008. Retrieved 2015-11-16.
  3. Faynor, Scott (January 25, 2008). "SOME REAL INFORMATION ON THE JAPANESE DICK-SUCKING TELEVISION SHOW". lukeford.com. Retrieved 2009-03-04.
  4. Bull, Brett (February 26, 2012). "AV stars out to play despite hard times". Japan Times. Retrieved 2013-09-10.
  5. Connell, Ryann (June 5, 2001). "Offbeat erotica pumps porno-maker into big time". Mainichi Shimbun. Retrieved 2007-03-06. This source is no longer available but a copy of the article can be accessed at http://cid-88684d2bf683ba51.skydrive.live.com/self.aspx/mainichi/moto/2001/2001.06/Offbeat%20erotica%20pumps%20porno-maker%20into%20big%20time.pdf
  6. "人類史上初!!超ヤリまくり!イキまくり!500人SEX!!" (in Japanese). DMM. Retrieved 2008-12-10.
  7. "500 Person Japanese Orgy". ethnorotica.com. June 13, 2006. Retrieved 2007-03-06.
  8. Otsubo, Kemuta (July 12, 2006). "速報!AV OPEN結果発表 (Preliminary AV Open results Page 2)" (in Japanese). All About. Retrieved 2008-12-09.
  9. McNeill, David (September 2003). "The Ray Kroc of Adult Video". Japan Inc. Retrieved 2009-04-01.
  10. "Tenga" (in Japanese). SOD. Retrieved 2008-12-11.
  11. "SOD Lotion ~ Emotion Type". JBOX. Retrieved 2008-12-11.
  12. "Anime On Demand" (in Japanese). anime.sod.co.jp. Archived from the original on February 8, 2010. Retrieved 2015-11-16.
  13. "Soft on Demand [jp]". IMdB. Retrieved 2008-12-11.
  14. "Yoroi (2008)". IMDb. Retrieved 2008-10-20.
  15. "Tôkyô Daigaku monogatari". IMDb. Retrieved 2009-04-29.
  16. "Godzilla Filmmaker Shusuke Kaneko to Debut Sci-Fi Action Film DANGER DOLLS at Cannes". SciFi Japan. Retrieved 2015-06-01.
  17. "Major Adult Film Company to Produce Children's Anime". Animaxis.com. Retrieved 2009-04-01.
  18. "Ajisai no Uta OAV". Anime News Network. July 15, 2004. Retrieved 2009-04-04.
  19. あじさいの唄 (in Japanese). SOD. Retrieved 2009-04-04.
  20. "1999" (in Japanese). AV Research Laboratory. Retrieved 2010-06-21.
  21. 1 2 "Soft On Demand Company Info". Urabon Navigator. Retrieved 2011-11-02.
  22. "STOP! STD" (in Japanese). SOD]. Retrieved 2008-12-11.
  23. 1 2 "JAV News - Are There Japanese Adult Video Awards Like AVN Awards in USA?". JAV News. August 26, 2008. Archived from the original on May 13, 2009. Retrieved 2015-11-16.
  24. 1 2 "Fix for Japan Pop-Culture Addicts". Wired. April 12, 2004. Retrieved 2009-02-08.
  25. "Nihon Ethics of Video Association" (in Japanese). Nihon Ethics of Video Association. Retrieved 2009-02-08.
  26. "コンテンツ・ソフト協同組合 (Content Soft Association)" (in Japanese). CSA. Retrieved 2009-02-17.
  27. "CSA Members" (in Japanese). CSA. Retrieved 2009-02-17.
  28. メーカー (in Japanese). SOD. Archived from the original on December 30, 2009. Retrieved 2010-06-20.
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