This raw aesthetic serves a psychological function. It suggests voyeurism, the illicit thrill of watching something not meant to be seen. For audiences saturated with high-budget, predictable romance, the "uncut" product offers a dangerous authenticity. It claims to show desire in its messy, awkward, and urgent state—stripped of the cultural filters that usually mediate it. This is its primary utility as a cultural artifact: it exposes the gap between how society says we should love and how we actually lust.