Part I: Appreciating True Erotica in Cinema
by Alicia ColonEven though I am of a certain age, I’m not ashamed to admit that I’m an aficionada of true cinematic erotica. Unfortunately it does not exist in today’s offerings which can only be described as soft porn and even beyond that. According to the Encyclopedia Britannica:
The word erotica typically applies to works in which the sexual element is regarded as part of the larger aesthetic aspect. It is usually distinguished from pornography, which can also have literary merit but which is usually understood to have sexual arousal as its main purpose.

Erotica should be what arouses sensuality and sexual desire in the imagination. Pornography is a cheap substitute to genuine sensuality by replacing it with naked thrusts and bursts of faux gasps of passion. How trite compared to visions created in our minds stimulated by a simple touch, look or gesture. Last night I watched the TCM channel which ran a surprising example of true erotica-Tarzan-the Ape Man.
Laugh if you will but Johnny Weismuller and Maureen O’Sullivan generate more heat in this 1932 action adventure film then any of the actors and actresses starring buck naked and writhing in today’s features.
I had seen the Tarzan movie on TV as a very young girl and didn’t quite understand anything other than the exciting animal scenes that would enrage PETA today. This time around I was fascinated by the primal sexual tension between the virginal Jane and her handsome savage abductor Tarzan; the feral child raised by apes to manhood and the future Lord Greystoke. Jane has warmed up to Tarzan as he has saved her time and again from other jungle creatures. After frolicking in the water, Jane lies back on some branches and puts her hand on Tarzan’s bare chest. After she says to him, “I bet you don’t even know what I mean by a kiss,” he looks at her, she looks back at her, and the long silence between them speaks volumes. He then looks up into the trees which holds her sleeping area and throws her over his shoulders. The next shot is Jane, stretching her arms behind her head and blissfully smiling, saying that she’s so happy. Her self satisfied expression of ecstasy says all we need to know about that night of love in the treetops with her Apollo. Needless to say, it’s all off screen and in the televised screening I viewed, Tarzan and Jane never even kiss.
Another eye opening oldie was with Marlene Dietrich in the 1933 torcher “Song of Songs”. Dietrich portrays an innocent country girl who meets a handsome sculptor. She agrees to pose nude for him but we only see her from the shoulders up. The artist however, is molding a full size nude statue and as he slowly caresses and smoothes the clay over its breasts- whew! That’s erotica.
The irony is that these films and many more like them were made under the guidelines of the Motion Picture production Code a.k.a. Hays Code. One of the restrictions in the code was: “Scenes of Passion” were not to be introduced when not essential to the plot. “Excessive and lustful kissing” was to be avoided, along with any other treatment that might “stimulate the lower and baser element.”
Although the code was not seriously enforced until 1934, it’s clear that filmmakers in that era were particularly adroit in producing erotica that still met the stringent format of the Hays Code. That skill is sorely missing in today’s directors and screenwriters who rely on the obligatory sex scene to score an R rating.

There have been a few notable exceptions that induced swoons and sighs sans nudity, grunts and groans, but these are at least a few decades old. In the 1979 movie “Tim”, a very young, gorgeous Mel Gibson suddenly grabbing Piper Laurie and planting a wet one on the older woman’s shocked face sent hearts racing. My husband, who admits to having seen “Deep Throat “ and “Behind the Green Door,” found the love scenes in the aptly named, “Sword of Lancelot” (1963) much more arousing.
As a child of the sixties and a visual artist, I’m not writing this as a Victorian prude but rather as a film buff who has observed with increasing dismay the lack of effort from Hollywood in producing quality sensual art that does not border on the obscene.
Can anyone claim that the 1981 remake of “The Postman Always Rings Twice” was an improvement over the original 1946 one starring John Garfield and Lana Turner because Jack Nicholson boinked Jessica Lange on a table?
[Tomorrow: Modern Cinema Hasn’t a Clue about Eroticism.]





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Clark Gable carrying Vivien Leigh up the stairs in Gone With the Wind…need I say more?
Erotica has always been under rated
Sexy and sexual always get exchanged when they are different
pOrn hijacked erotica in the 70's
What a shame
Montgomery Clift driven wild (and to the gas chamber) by Elizabeth Taylor in an adaptation of Dreiser's A Place in the SUN.
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Ava Gardner in Anything.
Body Heat's William Hurt trying to get into Kathleen Turner's house while she just stands stock still and waiting would be a modern exception. I don't know though, are the early 80's still modern?
"You know how to whistle, Steve. Just put your lips together and blow."
SD how bout Burt Lancaster and Deborah Kerr kissing on the beach as the tide comes in, in From Here to Eternity. Nice way to spend an evening.
Perfect.
How about the sensuous half-breed Jennifer Jones and the smoldering Gregory Peck in Duel in the Sun? The sexual tension between those two couldn't be cut with a hacksaw. The ending where they shoot each other and then dye in each others arms…wow.
Barbara Stanwyck and Fred MacMurray in Double Indemnity(1944), particularly the scene when she first meets him.
Fully inverted;
Jimmy Stewart and Donna Reed in IAWL; two little people in a little front hall in little Bedford Falls, suddenly irresistibly combust with "all I know is I have to keep you completely and forever" (dropping the Alpha Male on the pone and sending the status-lusting mother away in horrors).
The luminously beautiful and scantily clad Fay Wray twisting and writhing in King Kong's hand always did it for me. The ESB scene in particular where she kicks her flawless legs back and forth. If that scene wasn't trying to exploit a fetish then I don't know what scene ever has.
As for Tarzan, don't forget the nude underwater scene from TARZAN AND HIS MATE in 1934, which the Hays office cut and buried for decades.
I am happy to have lived through that era and enjoyed those great movies even if I did not understand what was “really” going on the first time around. Obviously I was aware on some level that something was happening. Probably why I’m such a fan of “old movies,” and women with great legs.
Hollywood pushed the envelope and took away the best part of any movie, our imaginations.
Then there is Claudette Colbert in THE SIGN OF THE CROSS, where she is in her milk filled bathing chamber and tells her female slave to get her clothes off and join her.
Jimmy Stewart and Grace Kelly in THE REAR WINDOW. Their banter early on is thick with sexual tension, with her subtly hinting to him and the audience that he is in for one hell of a night.
For a more recent example, "Ghost." The scene with Demi Moore sculpting while Patrick Swayze sits behind her with his hands on hers was so beautifully sexy. For me, they ruined the moment with the rest of the scene. If they had ended that scene with the first kiss, it would have been perfect.
I have to second the scene in It's A Wonderful Life between James Stewart and Donna Reed. Talk about erotic sexual chemistry. Whew. There's a difference between love, lust, and passion, and that scene has all three.
I would argue slightly with the author's premise in that the films she cites above were definitely pre-code, i.e., the code may have existed, but studios were not bound by it and made the racy films they wanted. It wasn't until after 1934 that the code was stringently enforced (or more accurately, self imposed) by Hollywood to avoid direct government censorship. TCM has run several series of the pre-code films. Not a whole lot of masterpieces, but very entertaining stuff.
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Same goes for music. Ever hear Stravinski's Rite of Spring as a piano solo? And they say there's no sensuality in classical music!
Anyone that doesn't like the opening scene of Atlantic City with Susan Sarandon and the lemons is no friend of mine.
Keep the lemons and the opening scene,dump Sarandon. I hope I'm still a friend of yours. Because I think the world of you. AA
w c fields and mae wast in my little chickadee, now thats hot:)
Rex Harrison and Gene Tierney in 1947 "The Ghost and Mrs. Muir" …. oh my!
On viewing that scene in adulthood my first thought was: "Would I have the energy to do ANYTHING after carrying her up all those stairs? " Ah, fantasy…
Great post. I'm waiting for some boy genius to announce his decision to "improve" "Casablanca". I will plead justifiable homicide.
For anyone needing a clue-in on why things are getting so perverted in our society, check out the Frankfurt School and particularly Herbert Marcuse ("Eros and Civilization"); the perverse minister of culture in Hungary's communist government Georg Lukacs, who targeted children for sexualization and thus rebellion against parental patterns of authority; and Theodor Adorno and Max Horkheimer, who targeted Christian culture for destruction.
Oh yeah Jennifer Jones I'm there. A real smoking tamale "Ruby Gentry" " Love is a Many Splendored Thing" " Portrait of Jennie" just to name a few. As I'm posting this post to you my mind is locking on "The Razor's Edge" Tyrone Power and Gene Tierney. A lot of good wholesome sexual tension in that flick between those two.What's the use of talking we could go on and on. I guess that's what I miss. The wholesomeness in the main of the erotica they had back then. Today they'll show you their tonsils the hard way if they're asked. I guess I'm just getting old or maybe I know the difference between movie erotica and smut. Anyway Dear SD…….We'll Always Have Paris. Be Well Dear. AA
How about Cary Grant and Eva Marie Saint in two scenes in 'North By Northwest'…the scene in the dining car,( I took notes where she gently took his hand when he lit her cigarette for use later, on dates) and later the scene in the Ms. Saint's sleeping car…right before she has to hide Cary (Roger OThornhil – ROT) in the fold out upper cot/bunk.
I always find that scene, ummm, stirring. Also, I agree with all the examples above. Another example is Kevin Costner and Sean Young getting to know each other in the limo…in 'No Way Out'…a little raw, but nonetheless 'interesting. ;>
John Wayne and Maureen O'Hara in "The Quiet Man". Not only scenes of erotic passion, but many a fine line about sex that were crafted to go right over the heads of any minor in the audience. As Mary Kate (O'Hara) watches over a wall as a large bed to being delivered to Sean Thornton (Wayne's) house, her brother's assistant standing next to her says "Aye, a man would have to be a sprinter to catch his wife in a bed like that."
Barry Fitzgerald looks over the same bed the day after Sean and Mary Kate's wedding – it's broken, and he exclaims "Impetuous! Homeric!"
surprised we are that no one has yet spoke of 'North by Northwest'…
At the end of Hitchcock's classic (Check the incredible blu-ray) the suave Cary Grant as he helping Eva Marie Saint up the precipice of Mt Rushmore he pulls her up into- the upper booth of the sleeping car- and then the train goes 'into the tunnel' end credits…
Need we say more?
Cary Grant and Eva Marie Saint in North By Northwest….
pick a scene
Deborah Kerr as a nun and Robert Mitchum as a Marine alone on an island in the Pacific during WWII.
Also too, in 'Thunderball' when Sean Connery's 007 dances with Claudine Auger's knockout Domino Vitale…
she nestles into his arms and coos- " the way you… HOLD me… with John Barry's symphony in the background.
Needless to say we learned how to dance- in a hurry…
The chess game between Faye Dunaway and Steve McQueen in the original "Thomas Crown Affair." Not a word is spoken.
And I'll vote not guilty,too!
You're right! But check out my reference to two of my favorite scenes from that movie, above. I never get tired of seeing NBNW. Great casting, great writing!
I agree with everyone that cited Jimmy Stewart and Donna Reed in "It's a Wonderful Life". I also like the scene in Alfred Hitchcock's, "Notorious", where Ingrid Bergman and Cary Grant are dicussing what they'll have for dinner while they're in a romantic clinch.
Dolores del Rio and Joel McCrea in "Bird of Paradise." Hot stuff!
The pottery scene in "Ghost," the scene where Kelly McGillis is standing in front of the mirror surveying her body for the first time in "Witness," and what a movie buff friend of mine calls the best soft porn movie of all time, "Blue Lagoon."
Less is more, a lesson modern movie makers seem to have missed. I mean did we need the word "f**k every other word to understand "From Here to Eternity" and the kissing scene on the beach between Burt Lancaster and Deborah Kerr?
Clark Gable and Jean Harlow in RED DUST – both at their most attractive and had more chemistry than any of today's screen couples.
YES! I was just going to comment on this very point. Sensualization of the culture is a Marxist aesthetic that disciples of the Frankfurt School began pushing in the early 1900s. Marxism doesn't work in a stable free society of educated, moral people. It can only be ushered in if that society is destabilized and brought into peril. Remember "Never waste a good crisis" from Rahm Emanuel? That has been the strategy from the start and any area of culture that could be bent into rebellion was attacked by these folks to create the crisis.
And who could forget the heat between Frodo and Sam in the Lord of the Rings trilogy.
Such passionate creatures these hobbits be…
Not only is that GWTW scene pretty hot but it is also deliciously unPC when you realize that after carrying her up the stairs, he rapes her. To further rub the feminists' noses in it, the following scene shows Scarlett stretching in bed the next morning with a glowing smile on her face. This movie definitely could NEVER be made today.
Uh…o-kay….
The pottery scene in "Ghost," the scene where Kelly McGillis is standing in front of the mirror surveying her body for the first time in "Witness," and what a movie buff friend of mine calls the best soft porn movie of all time, "Blue Lagoon."
Great examples. I'll add another Eva Marie Saint example: Marlon Brando, as the failed boxer/longshoreman Terry, breaks into her flat when she doesn't want to see him. (Stallone borrowed the scene almost complete for the pivotal love scene in the first Rocky). One of the most erotic scenes in modern film is the bedroom confrontation from "Internal Affairs" between the husband (Andy Garcia) and wife (Nancy Travis) after the bad cop (Richard Gere) has convinced Garcia of a nonexistent infidelity using a stolen undergarment. Never realized til now that the plot is straight out of Shakespeare! (Who also gave us the rather erotic – if played properly- "country matters" scene between Hamlet and Ophelia that ends with "Get thee to a nunnery").
A magnificent scene indeed. Further illustration that to properly enjoy films these days, one must be capable of separating the artist and their art.
Maureen O’Sullivan in that skimpy outfit in Tarzan
Too many movies these past years have the couple practically swallowing each other when a look and a simple kiss will do
Yeah. . . If we're going to talk ,erm , homoerotica. . .Ben-Hur did it right. Or Becket for that matter. Especially Becket.THAT was tension you could cut with a knife.
*MissQuinn*
You beat me to it! That has to be one of the most erotic movies in the century! Homeric!
Patrick Swayze, Demi Moore, pottery.
"Ghost"
How about Grace Kelly and Cary Grant in "To Catch a Thief". Touch them. You know you want to.
C
Virtually every scene in Spartacus with Jean Simmons and Kirk Douglas … and even Charles Laughton and all his household slave women… In my opinion this movie was more of a love story than an action / war flick.
Marilyn Monroe and Clark Gable in "The Misfits" and they were.
Exploitation by Arthur Millers screenplay written on the set.
[...] though it’s about Erotica, it’s actually quite benign. Please add comments to the article No comments Category: [...]
Dear Ms. Colon:
Thank you for writing this article. I'm an aspiring writer who wants to write in the manner of C.S. Lewis, namely of incorporating Biblical allusions to drive the story and character development. Earlier this year I began playing with a short story that I thought would wind up being pornographic, but as I prayed over it God took it in a different direction, expanding it into a full-length novel. The further I researched into it the better I came to appreciate the difference between erotica and pornography.
Much like Obama's campaign slogan of "hope and change," I gradually realized the power of understatement in leading the reader in a general direction and then leaving their imagination "fill in the blanks" with what they wanted to see in their minds.
Your article underscores and affirms for me the lessons that I learned in my endeavor. I thank you for writing it, and I now look forward to watching the movies you (and the posters) cite in my ongoing endeavor to improve my writing skills.
Lana Turner in THEY WON'T FORGET 1937, just quietly bouncing along the sidewalk in a snug sweater sans brassiere.
Sue Lyon in LOLITA 1962(?) sunbathing in a demure 2 piece suit, wearing a floppy hat and her heart-shaped red sunglasses lying on her tummy on a beach towel.
Deborah Kerr and Burt Lancaster on the beach in FROM HERE TO ETERNITY 1953 wearing only swimsuits, awash in the waves.
I agree with you in spirit Brother but you have to admit some of these Artistes. Make that awfuly tough.
Yes! The scene where they are sharing the telephone at Mary's house is thick with sexual tension. It's brilliant and anyone who's ever been crazy about a person recognizes the feelings they manage to convey.
[...] at Big Hollywood Alicia Colon writes about Appreciating True Erotica in Cinema, as opposed to putting yourself through any sort of [...]
How about Michael Mann's circa 1991 remake of Last of the Mohicans. In it, a ruggedly handsome Daniel Day-Lewis as Nathaniel, and a smart, sloe-eyed Madeleine Stowe as Cora, very nearly melt the camera in their rapidly unfolding on-screen romance. The build-up was just plain hot–as evidenced by the scene in the surgery when Cora catches Nathaniel looking intently at her as she patches up his lightly wounded brother (portrayed by stunningly handsome actor Eric Schweig) during a battle.
Cont'd
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Cora calls Nathaniel out on his staring, as a "proper" unmarried girl should. "What are you looking at, sir?" Hawkeye smiles and leans on his long rifle to continue his observations of her firelit beauty at his leisure. "Why, I"m looking at you, miss." She briefly lowers her eyes with a blush, then boldly raises them up to meet his gaze for a long, charged moment. Cora is luminous, her dark eyes radiating her newly discovered feelings. Finally, the moment is broken, and she gifts him with a sweet, tired smile. She's his.
Whew! I saw that at about age 19 and thought it a perfectly crafted scene. The love scene that followed later in the movie lasted no more than 45 seconds. It was passionate, intense, and utterly lacking in pneumatic thrusting of tongues and pelvises. It remains to this day one one of my favorite examples of the concept of leaving something to the imagination.
In THE UGLY AMERICAN (1963), Marlon Brando and Sandra Church arrive as ambassadors to Sarkan, a fictional southeast Asian nation, and go to their bedroom at the embassy, where she lies down to rest on their bed, fully and formally dressed (in a suit, as I recall), on her back, on top of the bedspread. Brando comes over and sits on a chair beside her, and as they make small talk, he reaches out and, very slowly and gently, massages her tummy. It's been almost fifty years and it is still one of the most erotic scenes I have ever seen.
yep, the good old days when you could think Sarandon was sexy and hot and not feel dirty thinking it.
lol.. Can't argue with you there
Nasstassja Kinsky in Maria's Lovers
Vertigo – that one scene with the climax music..and all the rest of them actually
Anthony Hopkins in "The Remains of the Day…
Anothony Hopkins and Jodie Foster – That scene with "the Touch of the finger" (People will say we're in love..)
Bette Davis and Paul Henreid in "Now Voyager" – when he lights her cigarette for her…
And okay…I have to say it, just to see if anyone agrees with me – there ARE more modern scenes that are erotic rather than p)rn… "Music of the Night" in The Phantom of the Opera (Gerry Butler). That's a dance of Eros if I ever saw one…
Part I:
The irony is that throughout history starry eyed ideologists of Marxism always thought that when they'll establish communist government in their society it would lead to a greater sexual liberation (since sexual suppression is obviously a capitalist thing, sarcasm), but in reality communist countries suppressed sexuality to an extent that those useful idiots couldn't have imagined.
For example: in the Soviet mindset the word "sex" was considered dirty ,sexual education didn't exist in schools, even married women who got pregnant were hiding it from their friends and coworkers till it became physically obvious, pregnancy in society’s eyes was the visible result of the "dirty" deed and women where taught to be ashamed of it (my own mother's experience), government preached that sexuality is a thing of the capitalist west, therefore a destructive force for the morality of Soviet people and sex should only be used for reproduction (while at the same time com. party officials themselves engaged heavily in debauchery).
Part II:
Another example comes from China, where during the cultural revolution one of the aims was to erase sexual differences between men and women (who can forget those unisex clothes/uniforms that robed people of any individuality and identity), the repression of human sexuality was even more stringent than in Soviet Union to a point when many young couples didn't know how to consummate their marriage and that babies come from sex (unbelievable, yet it took place in 20th century China), even more depressing result of that policy is that women unaware of how reproduction works used abortions as the only means of contraception. Now that China had experienced the change of attitudes toward sex, the consequences of earlier policies became more obvious, a large number of people in China who where old enough to be affected by heavy sexual repression during the cultural revolution are now being treated for many sexual dysfunctions that are the result of a totalitarian ideology.
What? No one has mentioned Clark Gable and Claudette Colbert in the "walls of Jericho" scene in It Happened One Night?? or the scene with the bathrobe in Wonderful Life.
For my money, Capra still remains the king of film. Just sayin'.
LOL!
I love this thread. May I add Sweet Land (2007 winner of Independent Spirit Awards Best Actor Elizbeth Reaser):
They end up never kissing till the end. It fills the erotic bill, I promise, and no sex, hardly anything. The director here is quite talented to pull this off. Its PG.
Norwegian-American farmer Olaf Torvik (Tim Guinee) and his rural Minnesotan community must struggle to overcome years of anti-German propaganda and prejudice when he discovers that his mail-order bride, Inge (Elizabeth Reaser), is not only a German but also an accidental Socialist. Writer Ali Selim also directs this Independent Spirit Award-winning tale of love's ability to triumph over ignorance.
Lana Turner in The Postman Always Rings Twice is high up my list.
I, too, was going to mention the love scene in Last of the Mohicans. Phew..probably the best screen kiss ever.
The young incredibly handsome Gregory Peck and beautiful Ingrid Bergman in Hitchcock's "Spellbound".
'
It's that gleaming white one piece suit she wearing that pushes Garfield over the edge.
'Same' suit in SULLIVAN'S TRAVELS worn by Veronica Lake.
Erotic will start your heart beating and never a word is spoken, yet a new story begins.
Kathy Bates in About Schmidt.
That hot tub scene with Jack is simply breathtaking…
Yeah, my future wife and I are in complete agreement with you. We never looked at a clay pot in quite the same after "Ghost."
I should've been clearer.
When we were dating, my girlfriend (now wife) and I saw "Ghost."
Ditto on the "Uh…o-kay"
The banter between Myrna Loy and William Powell as Nick and Nora Charles was pretty spicy. Love those two!
The always playful Nick and Nora Charles in the first "Thin Man". Between the nightly drinking and the daily hangovers, they always show a comedic respect for each other. When it was made in 1934, William Powell was 42 and Myrna Loy was 29. Oddly, the aforementioned beautiful, Maureen O' Sullivan, is also in the picture but does nothing for me. Twelve years later, Myrna Loy is the wife of Fredric March in "Best Years Of Our Lives". Her husband comes home after three years in the war wanting nothing more than to just celebrate life. Wow! One more image: Deborah Kerr in "From Here To Eternity". "Cheeees. Her and them sweaters!"
it also didn't hurt that maureen and johnny in 'tarzan' were nearly nude, in little more than mini-loincloths, filmed in the days before the odious hays code came to stomp on erotic creative expression.
The semi-rape scene in Son of th Sheik wirh Rudilph Valentino, click on the link below, ladies, to swoon:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mlAOKqr8kAU
You're right, but with one caveat………..many of the pre-code movies, that TCM runs on their pre-code n ights are masterpieces; especially when compared with the movies of the past 30+ years.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2MdhjnYhiEQ
Nearly 2 minutes of erotica 'masquerading' as comedy.
Marilyn Monroe quietly churns it up.
What about Gables line about her needing a good kissing and by a man who knows how?
I am a mere 42 years old, and so the picture of Marlene Dietrich reminds me of Tina Turner in Mad Max : Thunderdome. Another movie that had great sex appeal, but no blatant sex – hell, people were trying to survive in a post apocalyptic world, not rock the world with an orgasm.
I agree, Alicia. Porn is so lacking.
I've always like the scene in Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid where Redford is lying in wait for Katherine Ross. She comes into the dark room where he is pointing his gun at her and makes her slowly undress. Redofrd's expressions are perfect.
A more modern movie I think is pretty erotic without showing too much is Unfaithful. I wouldn't wanna watch that one with my parents. It shows plenty but also has some scenes you can fill in yourself.
not exactly subtle or very old, but the how about the restaurant scene in Flashdance?
and btw- i saw current pics of Jennifer Beals recently and she could probably still star in a remake…
[...] Hasn’t a Clue About Eroticism by Alicia Colon [Part one of this two-part series can be found here.] Sixteen of the top 20 box office earners have either a G or PG rating which should be a clue that [...]
That seen also has nudity with CC's breast/s on display as the level of the milk in the bath moves up and down as she moves.
I say The Quiet Man and It Happened One Night. The hitchhiking scene and the clever dialogue are incredibly sexy in a good way. "The walls of Jericho are about to fall!"
Beavis & Butthead Do America. The scene where Beavis sits next to the older lady (voiced by Cloris Leachman) on the airplane.
Daniel Day-Lewis and Michele Pfeiffer in "The Age of Innocence." All sorts of aching, unrequited desire — hot stuff!
Lana Turner in the Postman Always Rings twice wearing that short-short outfit. Never saw her look so good.
[...] second and third articles you should read are a series by Alicia Colon. She writes about the virtues of [...]
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