Monday 29 November 2010

Any Human Heart S01E02

Do you think we've got time for a five minute quickie?

There are plenty of female fans who dreamily think of Matthew Macfadyen when he was in Spooks and still fantasize about rumpling his duvet, but the reality may be more prosaic. At least with his on-screen erotic encounters, according to actress Hayley Atwell, who is seen tossing and turning with Macfadyen in episode two of the TV adaptation of William Boyd’s moving novel Any Human Heart.

She chirrups: "We had to strip but for our love scenes Matthew wore a sort of skin-coloured cloth to protect his modesty and I wore nipple pads which I painted smiley faces on."


Television Series: Any Human Heart (S01E02)
Release Date: November 2010
Actress: Hayley Atwell
Video Clips Credit: Trailblazer












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Friday 26 November 2010

Misfits S02E03

The big question after the latest episode of Misfits is does Antonia Thomas prefer Alisha with Simon or Curtis? In an interview on the Be Brilliant blog, she pauses for a moment, considering her answer then says: “That’s quite an interesting question.”, stalling for time before continuing, “I prefer Alisha with Simon because, the thing about Curtis is that he is a really nice guy but she can’t be her full self. As she quite grimly puts it: ‘What is this all I get? Wanking myself off in the storeroom?’” She shakes her head at that. “Cringe line.”


Television Series: Misfits (S02E03)
Release Date: November 2010
Actress: Antonia Thomas
Video Clip Credit: DeepAtSea
Video Clip Info: [mp4/h264/mp3/128kps; 35mb for 1m15s]











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Monday 22 November 2010

Any Human Heart S01E01

I like to fuck, and then I like to drink gin... and then I feel like fucking again...


Television Series: Any Human Heart (S01E01)
Release Date: November 2010
Actress: Holliday Grainger
Video Clips Credit: Trailblazer











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Wednesday 17 November 2010

How To Shoot A Sex Scene

The director of 'Love and Other Drugs' tells Newsweek everything you need to know about shooting a sex scene...

Anne Hathaway is generating Oscar buzz for her risky turn in Love and Other Drugs. She plays Maggie, a 20-something with Parkinson's disease. But that's not what makes the role so flashy. It's the flashing. Hathaway goes to a place that few actresses dare to visit anymore: the bedroom.

Whoever said that sex sells must not watch movies. Once upon a time, back in the '70s, we had Last Tango in Paris and Shampoo. This year, Rachel McAdams is fully covered during Morning Glory, as was the entire cast of Valentine's Day. Even the Sex and the City sequel felt chaste, with its setting in Abu Dhabi. By the way, that series originated on TV, where characters are having the best sex ever: True Blood, Boardwalk Empire, Hung, Californication, Cougartown. On Weeds, the actor known as Zack Morris recently got frisky in a bar.


Why are the movies so prudish in comparison? "It's because of the writing," says Edward Zwick, the director of Love and Other Drugs, who also created TV's Thirtysomething and My So-Called Life. "Studio movies are now designed to offend the least number of people possible, to open on 3,000 screens. Blockbusters, superhero movies, graphic novels, those are not about real situations. Sexuality is only interesting when it's real." The sex in Love and Other Drugs actually does feel real: it elevates the film from a standard romantic comedy to a movie for adults. Hathaway falls in love with a pharmaceutical rep played by Jake Gyllenhaal, and their pillow talk is part of their relationship. Newsweek asked Zwick to talk about sex, and how to shoot a sex scene.

If you were teaching a class to film students on how to direct a sex scene, what would you tell them?

I would say the first thing to understand is what not to do. There's a kind of sex scene that's in the spy movie, where the spy meets the hot girl and one thing leads to another and they find themselves in an elegant hotel room. The movie stops. The camera travels lovingly over her body, and you know she's going to get killed in the next reel. There is no reason to show that sexuality, because it has no bearing on the plot.

How do you think of sex onscreen?

Sex is a way of communicating in life. Sex is expression. It should be understood in the context of a story, to be part of the narrative.

How do you direct that?

You understand that the scene has a beginning, a middle, and an end. It has a purpose. In this movie, sex plays an important role in the narrative arc of the characters— they fall into bed long before they fall into love. That was our guide.

Do you and the actors sit down and talk about sex?

We talk about what turns us on and what turns us off. We watch some movies together. On one end of the spectrum is Rock Hudson and Doris Day in Pillow Talk, the other end is Michael Winterbottom's 9 Songs. I think we would look at something by Audiard, The Beat That Skipped My Heart, Last Tango in Paris, Sex and Lucia, some Almodóvar. The Europeans have traditionally been much more casual about sex than we are. How funny that we wouldn't consider sex part of a love story. In my experience, it's a rather central part of anybody's love.

Do the actors improvise?

Sure, we do try to improvise some things.

With their clothes off?

On. But you know, there is always so much you can do in a room, because when you get out to a sound stage and a set, everything is always different. It's colder. There are hundreds of people around you. There is the camera. The challenge is to have the power of concentration to shut that out. Unless you are the most lurid exhibitionist, I don't think having sex in front of other people is much of a turn-on.

What about the legal aspects?

There are conversations early on about what are you going to show in this scene, with lawyers and agents. They want that to be legislated. They prepare documents— pages and pages— but at a certain point it is about trust. I pledge there will be nothing in the film they aren't comfortable with.

Are the actors completely naked?

It depends. There is something called a merkin.

A merkin— what's that?

A merkin is a phrase that I believe comes from 19th-century England. Because of the possibility of lice and crabs, prostitutes would shave their public hair, but then wear something to make it look as if they had pubic hair. That is a merkin.

Is it like a pouch?

It's a patch. Or a pouch. It depends on which gender you're describing.

Where do you buy it?

I don't know. I suppose you go to the merkin store. They're very scanty and flesh-colored. After a certain point, they may have become more trouble than they are worth.

Why?

Sometimes there's a string, or else you get rid of the string and it has to be applied with tape.

Isn't that painful?

Yes. I think it very well is. One might choose not to have the merkin to not have the tape experience!
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