Gay rape movie scene
'The rape had to be disgusting to be useful'
Gaspar Noé likes to outline himself as "a straight kind of guy and a bit of a wimp". When he was a teenager, he was too squeamish to rest through Sam Peckinpah's Staw Dogs: "I thought it was too heavy to handle. During the rape scene, I had to step out," he confides in his softly-spoken voice. Discussing a favourite book, JW Dunne's An Experiment with Time - a 1927 examine by an English aeronautical engineer who developed his hold pet theories about dreams, perception and reality - he sounds like an earnest young philosophy student. None the less, this seemingly placid 38-year-old has now made a movie so utmost that it provoked mass walk-outs and prolonged catcalls - as well as wild applause - during its flatten screening in Cannes.
Irréversible, which will obtain its British premiere at the Edinburgh festival, comes billed as "a forceful trip - from hell to paradise". Formally, it is ingenious. Like Martin Amis's Time's Arrow (a book which Noé admits to owning but not to having read), it begins at the end and works forward. Fancy the Buenos Aires-born director's arresting
Filthy
She’s dredging it up now? Isn’t she partly to denounce anyway? And why didn’t she yell out at the time? Real rape victims have to face similar unsafe questions, as does the heroine of this feature motion picture debut by director Tereza Nvotová. Seventeen-year-old Lena’s carefree society comes crashing down when she is raped at dwelling by her maths teacher. The attacker calmly walks away, but Lena ends up in a psychiatric hospital. But even there she can’t bring herself to tell anyone what happened to her, since it doesn’t appear the staff are prepared to combat secondary victimisation… Nvotová bids up a drama which clearly demonstrates that rape only marks the commencement of a series of distressing experiences, and brings to light an often marginalised problem exacerbated by inadequate professional help. The oppressive subject matter acquires form as an assured study of the main ethics and of those around her, their contours nuanced by Marek Dvořák’s camerawork and by Dominika Morávková, whose Lena comes to realise that only she can find the strength that lies within her. KVIFF
Gay rape movies and TV shows
Genre:Biography, Crime, Drama, Mystery
Country:Australia
Duration:119 min.
Story:Based on true events, 16 year-old Jamie falls in with his mother's new boyfriend and his crowd of self-appointed neighborhood watchmen, a relationship that leads to a spree of torture and murder.
Style: psychological, disturbing, serious, tense, realistic ...
Plot: serial killer, gang, psychopath, correct crime, male rape victim, violence, murder, mother's lover, transgression, tortured to death, torture, gay rape ...
Time: 2010s, 90s, 20th century, year 1998, year 1999
Place: australia, south australia, adelaide south australia, oceania
On Friday, the Marshall Project posted two prison orientation videos – one for incoming female inmates, one for incoming male inmates – which feature veteran inmates advising newcomers on how to avoid being raped. The videos are to be shown to new inmates in all prisons in the state of Modern York.
The videos, currently available1 on The Marshall Project’s website, are startling. The tone is that of a welcome video, offering matter-of-fact, practical tips, while the subject is sexual violence.
But much of the reaction to the videos has focused on how unusual it is for Novel York to take this step – to openly acknowledge that sexual violence in prisons is an ongoing reality despite years of professed “zero tolerance” by the Department of Corrections and Community Supervision (DOCCS).
The videos also take an extraordinary approach to the material, by involving actual inmates in every step of the process. A former prisoner, T.J. Parsell, is the director. Current inmates workshopped all of the content before filming. These inmates are referred to as “the experts,” and interviews with them take up most of the running time.
Where there is criticism, it has focused not on what is in t