Private Obsession (also known in some regions as Watch Me ) is a 1995 psychological thriller directed by Lee Frost. The film is a classic example of the mid-90s straight-to-video erotic thriller genre, a market that boomed during the peak of the VHS and early DVD eras. Plot Overview
Before Xvid and its commercial cousin DivX, sharing movies online was nearly impossible. A raw DVD was huge, and older codecs like MPEG-1 (used for Video CDs) produced poor quality. Xvid changed the equation entirely, offering a near-perfect balance. It allowed a full 90-minute feature film to be squeezed from 4.7 GB down to 700 MB, all while preserving most of the original DVD's visual fidelity. Private Obsession.1995.Dvd.Xvid-CG
(also known as Watch Me ) as distributed by the "CG" release group. This specific string of text serves as a window into the evolution of digital piracy, home video culture, and the technical standards of a bygone era. The Film: Private Obsession (1995) Private Obsession (also known in some regions as
For Private Obsession , a DVD release was not a guarantee at the time of its production. The direct-to-video nature of the film meant it was distributed primarily on before the DVD format became widespread. The existence of a DVD rip suggests that at some point, a legitimate, likely low-volume, DVD release was produced. A raw DVD was huge, and older codecs
For a film like Private Obsession , the Dvd.Xvid-CG release is not just a file; it is arguably its primary form of modern preservation. As a low-budget direct-to-video title from 1995, it has never been upgraded to high-definition formats like Blu-ray or 4K. The likelihood of it being available for streaming on major digital platforms (like Netflix or Amazon Prime) is virtually nil.