Before the algorithm flattened everything into soft-core thumbnails and wellness influencers, there was CoccoVision — a low-fi, high-idiosyncrasy subscription series mailed out of a post office box in Malaga, Spain. The mastermind was a former German advertising executive known only as “Shydog.” His mission? To document the friction between naked human vulnerability and the stark, wind-bitten landscapes of Europe’s naturist coastlines.
The “Shydog” persona—the shy, observing dog—is crucial. He never appears on screen. He never speaks. He only watches, with loyalty and a slight, sad bewilderment. He is the ultimate voyeur who has renounced the thrill of voyeurism. He just wants to know: What are we when we stop performing?
The final 8 minutes, titled “The Concrete Beach,” drag. It features a lone British man in a seaside town in winter (Bognor Regis, maybe). He is the only nudist on a pebble beach, wrapped in a wool scarf (only his lower half is bare). He paces. Shydog holds the shot for too long. The man eventually sits, sighs, puts his shorts back on, and walks away. It feels less like commentary and more like a friend’s boring home video you’re forced to watch out of politeness. -CoccoVision- Shydog 4 European Nudists
Volume 4, European Nudists , is the outlier in the series. While Volumes 1-3 focused on the places (Cap d’Agde, Vera Playa, the lakes of Berlin), Volume 4 focuses entirely on the faces .
We open on an elderly Croatian man, 70ish, adjusting his bifocals while slicing a baguette on a picnic table. He is completely nude, save for a sunhat. He does not acknowledge the camera. For three minutes, we watch the crumbs fall onto his bare thighs. It is hypnotic. He only watches, with loyalty and a slight, sad bewilderment
The title card reads: “Clothes are the last lie. -CoccoVision”
The 48-minute runtime is a fever dream of Super 8 grain and minidisc ambient hum. There is no narration. There is no music score, only the raw audio of wind, distant breaking waves, and the percussive flutter of canvas awnings. barking laugh—at something the father whispers.
Then, a cut to a family of four from the Netherlands. The children (approx. 8 and 10) are building a sandcastle. Their parents are reading paperback thrillers. Shydog’s camera focuses not on bodies, but on the rituals : the mother applying zinc cream to the father’s shoulders, the son carefully placing a plastic flag atop the castle. The wind shifts, and you hear the mother laugh—a genuine, barking laugh—at something the father whispers. You realize you are watching domestic bliss without the costume of fabric.