Pictures Of Real Sex

Pictures Of Real Sex




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Pictures Of Real Sex

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Movie sex scenes come in all forms and they don't always go to plan , but there have been movies over the years that have gone one step further.
It's rare to see such scenes in mainstream movies, but ever since Lars von Trier's 1998 The Idiots was a critical success (even though it caused some controversy at the time), there have been arthouse and independent movies using actual sex in their final cuts.
And sometimes, it involved stars you wouldn't have expected to be involved.
Before von Trier was doing his thing and after Andy Warhol's Blue Story became the first movie featuring real sex to get a wide release in the US, there was Caligula, which starred the likes of Malcolm McDowell and Helen Mirren.
Not that those stars were involved in the movie's orgy scenes, as producer Bob Guccione (the founder of Penthouse magazine) filmed those hardcore scenes after production had finished, using a skeleton crew and Penthouse Pets, before editing them into the final movie.
Before he was the titular giant in The BFG or setting up an Easter egg hunt in Ready Player One , Mark Rylance starred with Kerry Fox in Intimacy, which saw them play two people who meet weekly to have sex, no strings attached.
One such scene saw Fox's character perform fellatio on Rylance's character, which took place for real.
Michael Winterbottom's 9 Songs arguably remains the most sexually explicit (non-porn) British movie of all time.
It contains several scenes of unsimulated sex between the two leads (Kieran O'Brien and Margo Stilley). All that and nine live music performances, what more could you want?
A movie that centres on people attending an artistic/sexual salon was a likely contender to feature unsimulated sex and Shortbus does, but director John Cameron Mitchell had a reason for including it.
"I wanted to work with real sex as part of the story, as it is in our lives — we don't cut away the first time we have sex with someone we are in love with," he told MEL Magazine . "The actors would have to be very special actors who'd want to go there with me and trust me. We worked with them for two-and-a half years before we filmed it."
The result is an oddly charming, sex-positive film about emotional healing following 9/11.
Before Robert Pattinson noticed how characters he played always masturbated in movies , he actually masturbated for real in Little Ashes, where he played Salvador Dalí. According to Pattinson, he had to do it for real as it wouldn't have looked authentic .
"Try it. I can tell you right now, no chance. It just doesn’t work. So I rubbed one out in front of the camera," he recalled, adding that he was worried it'd end his career, but then he got Twilight . A happy ending, for sure.
Lars von Trier was at it again with Antichrist, about a couple who retreat to a cabin in the woods after the death of their child. It also featured hardcore sex scenes, but it wasn't involving the main stars Willem Dafoe and Charlotte Gainsbourg.
"We used porn actors. In fact, it was funny, for the scene in which she masturbates him and the blood comes out, they just kept on going. I could not understand it," von Trier told Rotten Tomatoes . "And then someone told me that in porn you are not allowed to stop until the director tells you!"
Lars again, this time in the two-part drama Nymphomaniac about a self-diagnosed nymphomaniac who recounts her sexual experiences after an assault. As with Antichrist , von Trier used the same digital trickery to include real sex scenes in the movie.
"We shot the actors pretending to have sex and then had the body doubles, who really did have sex, and in post we will digital-impose the two," producer Louise Vesth explained . "So above the waist it will be the star and the below the waist it will be the doubles."
Experimental road movie The Brown Bunny sees a motorcycle racer (Vincent Gallo) haunted by memories of his ex-girlfriend (Chloë Sevigny), and features a scene where Sevigny performs unsimulated oral sex on Gallo.
It caused controversy at its Cannes premiere, but in 2016, Sevigny stood by the scene. "I'd probably still do it today," she told Variety . "I believe in Vincent as an artist and I stand by the film."
In terms of depicting real sex in movies, Gaspar Noé rivals Lars von Trier in terms of going big on it. Noé followed up Enter the Void 's lengthy sequence of hardcore sex with Love , a movie all about sex that features a mix of real and simulated sex .
The real talking point is that the movie ended up being a TikTok challenge where users recorded themselves watching the first scene of Love without knowing that it featured a couple's mutual masturbation.





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Does uncovering the vulnerable, clumsy sides of sex make you better at it? These "social sex" companies think so.
Lynn La covers mobile reviews and news. She previously wrote for The Sacramento Bee, Macworld and The Global Post.
Editors' note: This story is part of our Turned On special report exploring the intersection of sex and technology. It contains sexually explicit descriptions and may not be suited for younger readers.
In the sunny living room of a Mediterranean-style house in Oakland, California, Rosalind sips coffee through a straw. The 24-year-old research assistant wears a thin green utility jacket and has large brown eyes and dark wavy hair with pin-up-girl bangs. Sitting on a couch as SLR cameras record her, she gets ready to tell nine people, none of whom she's met in real life before, about the first time she masturbated.
"I can't believe I told you guys about the shower masturbation," says Rosalind (not her real name). "That's literally the first time I have ever said that out loud."
A few crew members chuckle. They're filming for OMGYes , a site that hosts a series of online videos about how to sexually satisfy a woman.
OMGYes is one of a number of companies ushering sex education for the 18 and older crowd into a new era. Serving a space somewhere between the staid, impassive lectures many sat through as students and a pornography industry that values entertainment above all else, these companies use interactive and user-generated digital media to explore the more emotional, intimate and vulnerable sides of sex.
"The internet has offered, along with a lot of really disturbing images and ideas, a lot of potential for positive education," says Peggy Orenstein, author of "Girls & Sex" and "Cinderella Ate my Daughter," which examines how modern culture sexualizes young girls. Sites like OMGYes, Orenstein says, "have the opportunity to do an end-run around traditional sources of education -- and miseducation."
On the set of OMGYes. The company is in the process of producing its second season.
Launched in 2015 by U.C. Berkeley graduates Lydia Daniller and Rob Perkins, OMGYes is a startup dedicated to "the science of women's pleasure." Its videos feature one-on-one interviews with women like Rosalind who share their sexual history and favorite techniques.
Viewers can, for example, use their fingers to rub and tap digital renderings of female genitalia on a touchscreen. These images are created from thousands of composited, high-definition photographs stitched together from some of OMGYes' interviewees, who range in race, age and body type. As you touch, a voice-over softly guides you where to touch and how fast. The lessons end when the screen fades to white. If you do everything "right," the voice lets out a satisfying sigh. If not, she suggests you stop and take a break.
Online videos have attempted to educate about sex before. In addition to the YouTube channels Sexplanations and Hannah Witton , there's Laci Green . The 27-year-old YouTube personality has talked about sex and dating since 2008, and has over 1.5 million subscribers. But while videos by Green and others simply require passive watching, OMGYes infuses its tutorials with a level of visceral interactivity and immediacy that video blogs, books and magazines can't offer.
Women talk frankly to the camera for OMGYes. 
Though the tutorials can be titillating, OMGYes is serious about the facts and techniques it presents. In partnership with Indiana University and The Kinsey Institute , it gathered feedback from more than 2,000 women, ages 18-95. With this information, OMGYes offers a platform for women to talk about a subject that at worst is seen as taboo, and at best, unimportant.
"Why aren't we talking about pleasure? Like actual pleasure," says Sybil Lockhart, lead researcher at OMGYes. "When we went to look up what the research was on pleasure, we found that there really wasn't any. What gets funded generally is pathology. It's anorgasmia or dryness or soreness."
The first season of OMGYes is currently available for a $40 flat fee (about £30 or AU$50), and includes lessons about delaying and intensifying orgasms, stimulating the clitoris and communicating in the bedroom. For its 200,000 current users, OMGYes wants its upcoming second season, which doesn't yet have a release date, to cover internal vaginal touch. It brought in Rosalind to talk about experiences including female ejaculation. 
After Rosalind wraps up her onscreen interview, the team breaks for a late lunch of Chinese takeout. Later, Rosalind will shoot her touch-and-talk scene, where she'll masturbate on camera and narrate what works.
At the end of all this, she'll fly back home to DC and return to her job at a university. She hopes her contributions to the project will help form a more sensible, but still joyful, narrative around sex.
"Having more resources like this gives [people] a positive interaction with the actual ins-and-outs of human sexuality, rather than the facade we see in pornography," Rosalind says. "Fantasies are great, but demonstrate them in a way that are actually attainable."
The "facade of pornography," and its entertaining but often unrealistic depictions of sex, motivated Cindy Gallop to find Make Love Not Porn (MLNP) in 2012. A former publicist and marketer who now heads her own consultant firm, Gallop is everything you'd expect an ad exec to be -- fast-talking, blunt and charismatic. She created the site after discovering many of the men she slept with made false assumptions about what she wanted in bed.
"Porn, by default, becomes sex education, and not in a good way," Gallop says. "But the issue is not porn. The issue is that we don't talk about sex in the real world." The combination of free streaming online pornography and society's reluctance to talk openly about sex, Gallop says, results in people taking their sexual behavioral cues from pornography.
Cindy Gallop at Lincoln Center in New York City, 2013.
To counter this, MLNP encourages users to upload and share videos of themselves having sex or masturbating. Subscribers can rent videos for $5 (about £4 or AU$6, converted) and stream them for three weeks. MLNP has two requirements for submissions: all those involved must consent to the whole process (the recording, the submission and most importantly, the sex itself) and participants must be having the sex they'd have in real life.
One video shows a woman getting into a coughing fit while her partner rubs her back and offers a tissue. Another features an orange tabby cat jumping on the bed, indifferently watching its owners have sex and walking to the foot of the bed to lie down. There is small talk. There is silence. There are women with body hair. There are naked men wearing socks.
MLNP doesn't consider its videos to be pornography or even amateur, and to label them as either would be a bit reductive. These videos don't feature professional actors contractually paid to have sex. The stars are everyday people experiencing genuine sexual connections.
"It's not performing for the camera," says Sarah Beall, MLNP's curator and community manager. "What we're doing is creating a space to show that real-world sex comes in all different varieties and it isn't less valuable, pleasurable or worthwhile."
Other services have goals similar to MLNP. The YouTube channel Fck Yes , for example, shows how people can seek and receive sexual consent. There are only four complete episodes so far, and while the videos use explicit language, they're relatively safe for work and don't depict actual sex.
MLNP videos include actual sex, and that they are crowdsourced and shareable online is key to MLNP's overall mission. Anyone with the moxie to whip out a phone and record themselves can spontaneously upload a video and share it with MLNP's 400,000 subscribers. In the five years since the site launched, 200 users have submitted 1,500 videos.
The company likens users uploading their sexual adventures to MLNP to social media users posting their latest meal on Instagram or vacation photos on Facebook.
"We're building a whole new category on the internet called 'social sex,'" Gallop says. "Our competition isn't porn. It's Facebook and YouTube . Or it would be Facebook and YouTube if they allowed sexual expression."
By making more down-to-earth depictions of sex as accessible as possible, Gallop hopes sex will be viewed not as something scandalous or fantastical, but as something intrinsically human. 
"Nobody ever brings us up on how to behave well in bed," she says. "But they should. Because there is empathy, sensitivity, generosity, kindness. All those are as important [in sex] as they are in other areas of our lives where we're actively taught to have those values."
Empathy, sensitivity and kindness aren't terms usually used to describe pornography. But porn production company BaDoinkVR hopes to change that. Founded in 2006 and based in Rochester, New York, BaDoinkVR specializes in virtual reality porn.
Although the majority of its content falls into what you'd typically see on a porn site (blond, blowjob, threesome), two of its videos, "Virtual Sexology I" and "Virtual Sexology II," aim to educate viewers about sexual positions and techniques through a first-person point of view.
On the set of "Virtual Sexology II."
Viewers are in the front seat, engaging in foreplay and having sex with an encouraging partner. Sometimes, an omniscient female voice-over gives tips, chiming in about the benefits of pelvic exercises or sex toys. During one scene, when the actress is on her back in a missionary position, the voice cuts in to remind viewers that "pulling the legs back to the chest or close to the ears can create deeper penetration, which can be uncomfortable or pleasurable depending on her body preference."
"The porn industry's primary objective is to entertain viewers," says Dinorah Hernandez, a producer at BaDoinkVR and director of "Virtual Sexology II." But porn can also be used to educate viewers, she says, adding that in the end, "Virtual Sexology" was created to "help people become better, more confident and more attentive lovers."
BaDoinkVR isn't exactly alone in its endeavor to educate within the industry. The video streaming service PornHub , for example, launched a sex education and sexual wellness portal in February 2016. But while the portal functions more like an info center, BaDoinkVR is creating original and engaging video content. 
A voice-over gives full context of a sex toy that actress August Ames introduces in "Virtual Sexology I."
Geared toward straight men, "Virtual Sexology I" has been downloaded over 50,000 times and was BaDoinkVR's most
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