Sex Big Stars

Sex Big Stars




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Sex Big Stars
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TV and Movies · Posted on Dec 5, 2020







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Robert Pattinson, when called on to simulate masturbating in the 2008 film Little Ashes , felt his efforts weren't coming off realistic enough, so he went ahead and did the deed on camera.




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Most people when watching these movies: "How was this allowed?!"
The experimental movie is about a motorcycle racer (Gallo) who is haunted by tragic memories of a former girlfriend (Sevigny), but it's most known for that scene and its reception at the Cannes Film festival (more on that later).
Gallo, who also wrote and directed the movie, told Film Freak Central that he pitched the project to Sevigny (with whom he'd had a previous relationship of sorts) by saying, "Remember that night in Paris when I did that thing to you but you didn't do it to me because you weren't so into it? Well, you might have to do that. On film." He went on to say that, to his eyes, the scene was needed to demonstrate the connection between male sexuality and self-loathing.
That Sevigny agreed to be in a sure-to-be-notorious scene was surprising, considering that she was a well-known, Academy Award–nominated actor, but she stood by her decision over a decade later.
“I’d probably still do it today. I believe in Vincent as an artist, and I stand by the film,” she told Variety in 2016, adding, “It was a subversive act. It was a risk."
Unfortunately, the risk didn't quite pay off. The debut screening of the film at the Cannes Film Festival ended in massive boos, with famed film critic Roger Ebert calling it the worst film ever shown at the festival.
If masturbating on the set of a major motion picture sounds surreal, perhaps it's fitting that Pattinson was playing surrealist painter Salvador Dalí.
In a 2013 interview with Germany's Interview magazine, Pattinson revealed that his authentic orgasm face is captured in the film. When asked why he didn't simply pretend, Pattinson replied, "Try it. I can tell you right now, no chance. It just doesn’t work." He went on to say that he was worried the scene might ruin his career, but very shortly after production wrapped, he got the call telling him that he'd been cast in Twilight .
Fortuitously, it seems that Pattinson's acting chops have improved since those early days of his career. He has since successfully simulated masturbation in four movies: High Life , Damsel , The Devil All the Time , and The Lighthouse .
Gaspar Noé's film about a young couple whose relationship takes a turn when they invite a third person into their bed didn't make a huge splash upon its release. But five years later, it hit Netflix's Top 10 after the TikTok challenge — where people filmed themselves watching the opening scene without knowing anything about the film — took off. (Sorry, folks, Love is no longer on Netflix, but the film starts with the couple totally naked in bed, pleasuring each other to climax with their hands. It's no Indiana Jones entering a Peruvian temple to retrieve a golden idol, but it's still a helluva a way to start a film!)
Noé told Esquire that despite all the unsimulated sex, the actors did not prepare by having practice sex. "They kissed for the first time on the first day of shooting. And in the movie, most scenes are real, but some are simulated. We don't want to promote what is what."
Producer Louise Vesth explained to the Hollywood Reporter prior to the film's release that the production had the stars simulate their sex scenes, then brought in body doubles to film the same sex scenes unsimulated. Later, in postproduction, they used digital effects to combine the two. “So above the waist, it will be the star, and below the waist, it will be the doubles,” Vesth said.
The production originally presented itself like a straightforward, albeit sexy take on Roman history, but once production wrapped and director Tinto Brass and his acclaimed stars went home, Guccione sneaked back onto the set with a crew of Penthouse pets and filmed a bunch of orgiastic scenes featuring real, unsimulated sex and added them throughout the final film.
The released film — now bloated to nearly three hours — did very well in Italian theaters before it was confiscated by authorities for being obscene. In America, the film grossed $23 million (making it the highest-grossing independent film ever at the time) but faced many obscenity lawsuits.
This film by Mitchell — the co-creator and original star of Hedwig and the Angry Inch — was about a diverse group of young people trying to find their place in New York. Mitchell told Medium, "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. ... So Shortbus was an experiment, and 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 film's stars, Margo Stilley and Kieran O'Brien, do almost everything that can be done in the film. Beyond the foot job, they masturbate with and without a vibrator and perform fellatio, and O'Brien even ejaculates onscreen.
In the end, though, all the sexual fireworks didn't impress critics or viewers. The critics' consensus on Rotten Tomatoes is, "The unerotic sex scenes quickly become tedious to watch, and the lovers lack the personality necessary to make viewers care about them."
Today Warhol is best remembered as the revolutionary pop artist behind iconic silk-screened paintings of Campbell's Soup cans and Marilyn Monroe, but he was a prolific filmmaker. His films, however, rarely looked anything like what most people imagine a film to look like. His five-and-a-half-hour film Sleep , for example, was entirely made up of footage of his boyfriend asleep.
The plot of the 133-minute Blue Movie was a little more involved, but pretty simple: A couple (played by Viva and Louis Walden) hang out in their New York apartment. They chat about things like the Vietnam War, cook, shower, and, finally, have unsimulated sex.
The movie debuted very successfully at theaters in New York and also screened in Berkeley, California. It wasn't all roses, though: One New York City theater that screened it was fined $250 for obscenity.
John Waters, in a bit of comic irony I imagine he finds highly amusing, is best known these days for his contribution to the wonderfully wholesome musical Hairspray! But for the majority of his career — and especially early in it — he was known for making some of the raunchiest, most offensive cult films ever.
The most famous of these films is Pink Flamingos , which stars Waters' longtime collaborator, drag queen Divine, as — oh boy, how to synopsize this movie — a woman named the "filthiest person alive" and her rivals who try to steal the title from her. If you're familiar with this movie, you probably know it ends with Divine picking up real dog poop off the ground and eating it.
Equally unsettling is the scene where Divine, excited by defiling her rivals' home, performs oral sex on the actor portraying her son, Crackers. Understanding what Waters was going for from the vantage of 2020 may be hard, but he told the Washington Post on the film's 25th anniversary that the film was thumbing its nose at middle-class and suburban values. "We wanted to do cultural terrorism in a funny way," he said.
The film became a hit across America in underground theaters, although it was declared illegal in places like Hicksville, New York, and Switzerland.
The graphic sex scene in the supernatural thriller — featuring what appeared to be oral sex performed by Sutherland — was buzzed about even before the film's release, and director Nicolas Roeg had to edit it in a fragmented manner to enable the film to receive an R rating in the US. In England, the film got an X rating.
For years after the film's release, rumors swirled about the scene, with some saying that Christie's then-boyfriend Warren Beatty lobbied to get the sex scene cut out of the film , and others saying that there was unedited footage of the scene floating around Hollywood that clearly showed they were having intercourse.
Finally, in 2011, former movie executive and Variety editor-in-chief Peter Bart released a memoir entitled Infamous Players , in which he says that he was on the set and saw the much-ballyhooed scene being filmed. He wrote , "It was clear to me they were no longer simply acting. They were (having sex) on camera."
That solves it, right? Not so fast. Sutherland vehemently denied Bart's claim, saying that the sex was simulated and that Bart never saw it because only four people were in the room while filming: the two actors, the director, and the cinematographer. Peter Katz, one of the film's producers, backed up Sutherland, saying, "While there was a sex scene captured on film, it was not a scene that would lead to the creation of a human being."
You know what? Simulated or not, they must've done something right if everyone is still talking about it almost 50 years later!
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Published Aug. 18, 2022 12:09PM ET 
Compared to hornier reality shows, there’s not much sex on “Big Brother”—which is why it was shocking (and disturbing) when Kyle and Alyssa hooked up…on blow-up pool toys, at that.
I cannot imagine having sex on a pool floatie.
I think it’s the vinyl of it all: the squeaking, the unevenness, the way that the plastic forcibly fuses to your skin. In my estimation, banging on a pool lounger is sandwiched between a water bed and gravel in my ranking of worst places to engage in coitus. And yet, on this season of Big Brother , two houseguests have done just that: they made sweet, sweet love on a pool floatie. And in a wilder twist, they’re hoping no one noticed.
I have long been a Big Brother viewer , though I fell off somewhere around 2013 during that one season where the houseguests got super racist (one contestant’s name was quite literally an anagram for Aryan ). Then I picked the long-running reality show up again last season, when The Cookout–an alliance of six Black houseguests–banded together, made the final six, and crowned the series’ first ever Black winner. It was a poignant moment for the series, especially considering how few poignant moments come out of Big Brother .
But this year, we’ve meandered our way back to the middle. The season kicked off with a group of houseguests bullying one dark-skinned Black woman and then course corrected when this season’s outsiders formed an alliance against the house, which takes us to today: the era of pool-floatie sex.
The participants, Kyle Capener and Alyssa Snider, are 20-somethings who seem to have no wherewithal that they’re on a show that streams 24/7. He looks like he’s in real estate. She looks like she probably owns an Etsy shop. I refuse to look into it because, at some point, you have to draw boundaries with this show. The short of it is that after some light kissing, the couple decided to consummate their summer romance in the punishment room, of all places. Each season, the room has different themes. This year, players who are sentenced to sleep there must do so on pool floaties using towels as blankets.
Sleep, screw, what have you–Kyle and Alyssa made do with what they had. Obviously, Big Brother cut the feeds because ViacomCBS isn’t (yet) in the market of distributing found-footage porn. But Alyssa relayed the information to audiences when she immediately went and told another houseguest, asking him not to say anything—as if viewers didn’t just watch the confession in real time.
That’s what I can’t stop thinking about: not the towel-laden vinyl sex, per se, but rather the decision making involved and this desire for privacy.
To be clear, this isn’t the first time that a pair has had some kind of sexual intercourse in the Big Brother house. I’m also not trying to sex-shame anyone because; if two consenting adults want to have sex in a windowless room on a vibrantly colored inflatable butterfly, have at it. But I am curious what the deliberation process was like, especially considering that Alyssa and Kyle both seemed to want it kept secret.
Is this an issue that incredibly hot people have? When you can bounce a quarter off your own ass, do the rules of polite society simply feel beneath you? Does judgment fade when two 10s consider becoming one 20? Does only my skin stick to vinyl in that unpleasant way? Should I have eaten that entire pizza while watching Big Brother? My questions are endless.
But the most bananas question that I have is, “What were they expecting?” Because, in a recurring theme for this show, the sentiment from Kyle and Alyssa is as such: I hope there are no repercussions for what I just did on one of summer’s most popular television shows.
More seriously, Kyle has started literally voicing that concern to the cameras . The timing is convenient, considering that it’s also just a few days after he’s been skewered on social media for targeting players of color, consulting fellow white players because he’s worried that the people of color might band together to take them out (despite little evidence supporting that theory). That is a much more serious conversation for a different day.
Pool-floatie sex, however, is a perfect example for this conundrum of people doing egregious things on camera despite wanting privacy. Every summer, there’s a new kind of fuckery that emerges from Big Brother houseguests, despite seasons of cautionary tales that have come before them.
There are players who seem intent on playing the game, and then there are hardbodies who have a different agenda. Dare I say, these people look for ways to outdo houseguests of years’ passed. They see an inflatable watermelon in the corner, covered in an old beach towel, and they say, “This is my Camelot. There will never be another Camelot,” and they–I believe this is the medical term–take it to pound town.
Maybe the move here is just to own it. I don’t fault these people for finding pleasure in the confines of a reality show, but let’s not pretend like we didn’t know the consequences. I wouldn’t go to Olive Garden looking for a quesadilla, and I wouldn’t go on Big Brother looking for a moment to myself.
Much like God or Santa Claus, Big Brother is always watching. So why are people shocked when they end up on the naughty list?

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