Not exact matches
The Word for Word Bible Comic promises to be an excellent
graphic novel covering the entire Bible, violence,
sex, and all... In our visually - oriented culture, this sounds
like a great project!
Too much nudity and
graphic sex for my
liking, perhaps they should have focused more on developing the storyline and characters instead of what position they can get them in next!
From lush cinematics to detailed in - game
graphics, Resident Evil Revelations looks great on the PS3, especially the character model of Jill who is not only oozing with
sex appeal but moves with a human -
like grace.
For a moment, let's just set aside all the controversy surrounding this year's Palme d'Or winning film — whether it's the
graphic sex scenes, or the allegations of emotional abuse of lead actresses Léa Seydoux, Adèle Exarchopoulos and crew members by their director Abdellatif Kechiche — and consider that this just looks
like a damn good love story.
That doesn't sound
like much but it does include a surprisingly
graphic look at the shadowy, pivotal (supposedly simulated) fellatio scene and more to a couple of Ryan / Ruffalo
sex scenes.
Despite the plethora of bawdiness, all the
sex remains verbal; even in this Unrated Edition, which runs a reported 20 minutes longer than the theatrical cut, the titillation never gets any more visually
graphic than scanty clothing and groping an occupied football -
like brasierre.
«Mektoub My Love: Canto Uno» premiered at the Venice Film Festival earlier today and, just
like Kechiche's previous feature, it's already courting controversy over its
graphic sex scenes and male gaze.
Exarchopolous, feeling
like she's come from nowhere, is in every single scene, the unflinching center of our attention and identification throughout, and Kechiche weaves the film around her so unobtrusively that you almost don't feel his presence (except possibly in the film's laudably
graphic but nonetheless overlong first lesbian
sex scene)-- surely a mark of an exceptional skill.
The beginning of the film is much
like a typical teenage
sex comedy — albeit one with a lot more
graphic detail than anything Hollywood has put out — as two teenage boys spend a bored summer away from their girlfriends and look for whatever action may come their way, whether it be
sex, drugs, alcohol, or swimming in the country club pool when no one's around.
Myroslav Slaboshpytskiy «s film is undoubtedly a difficult watch, featuring an abortion, some
graphic scenes of
sex and bloody violence, and the eerie quietness in which it's all carried out is less a comment on deafness than a clever way of making us examine the idea of a closed system which, «Lord of the Flies «-
like, refers only to itself.
I didn't
like the sudden,
graphic sex scenes that did nothing to further the plot and only seemed to exist to shock the reader.
Sex generally plays a role and can be graphic — but (unlike in erotic fiction, like Fifty Shades of Grey) the sex isn't necessarily the central reason for existence of the work, rather just one important facet of the protagonist's journey of self - discove
Sex generally plays a role and can be
graphic — but (unlike in erotic fiction,
like Fifty Shades of Grey) the
sex isn't necessarily the central reason for existence of the work, rather just one important facet of the protagonist's journey of self - discove
sex isn't necessarily the central reason for existence of the work, rather just one important facet of the protagonist's journey of self - discovery.
But its
graphics style is gorgeous, pretty interesting puzzles (although some can be sort of cheated by flying the wizard (which sounds
like a
sex act)-RRB-, and simple but cute story telling.