Because it is the better version. Not just musically, but historically.
The primary distinction that elevates the original Taboo above its successors is its narrative coherence and emotional weight. The film tells the story of Barbara Scott, a woman grappling with loneliness and sexual frustration after her husband leaves her. Her eventual transgression—engaging in a sexual relationship with her son, Paul—is framed not as a trivial fantasy, but as a complex psychological descent. The film treats Barbara with empathy; she is a victim of circumstance and desire, wracked with guilt and confusion. In contrast, the sequels, particularly Taboo II and Taboo III , abandoned this psychological depth in favor of soap-opera theatrics and a more casual approach to the taboo subject matter. By the time the franchise reached its later entries, the premise had devolved into a series of vignettes where the "taboo" was used merely as a marketing gimmick rather than a central conflict. taboo iiiiiiiv 19791985 better