even MORE pics of ALEX MINSKY by Gabriel Gastelum (via gdxblog)
Model: [ Alex Minsky ]
Undies: [ N2N Bodywear ]
photos by Gabriel Gastelum (Facebook)
BEARcelona 2013 ! NEW photo series by torres ibarzo
“We have just published the new series we did for bears meeting in a bar in Barcelona last Easter”: torres ibarzo
torres ibarzo on FACEBOOK
Alain Guiraudie’s L’ INCONNU DU LAC ‘ Stranger by the Lake’ (via david.b)
L INCONNU DU LAC (Bande annonce VO FR) from Les Films Du Losange on Vimeo.
CANNES – Nothing I’ve seen at Cannes so far — not even the current Palme d’Or favorite, Hirokazu Kore-eda’s button-cute parenthood drama “Like Father, Like Son” — has, to my ear, pushed the end-credits clap-o-meter quite as far into the red as Alain Guiraudie’s Un Certain Regard entry “Stranger by the Lake.” Elated whoops and whistles greeted this minimalist French thriller’s final fade to black: not the reaction you’d usually expect from a civilian festival crowd for a work of such sleek, stark nihilism as to prompt visions of Robert Bresson adapting Patricia Highsmith. All of which leads me to at least one conclusion: audiences out there are really starved for gay sex.
Yes, “Stranger by the Lake” features more graphic man-on-man action on screen than you can, er, shake a stick at, granting it an immediate festival-world notoriety that will dissipate swiftly as many distributors simply cast it into the “unreleasable” pile. But while some will deem the film barely distinguishable from gay pornography, its surfeit of explicit sex scenes has a function beyond base titillation (though, let it be said, there’s plenty of that too). If many films have put the practicalities and politics of casual sex to more rigorous examination on film in recent years, I either haven’t seen them or napped through a lot of the subtext in “Hitch.”
The setting — from which the film never strays over a timespan of several days, lending proceedings an oddly airy claustrophobia — is a picturesque lakeside cruising ground in rural France, frequented by a small but restlessly circulating crowd of gay regulars and holidaymakers, who turn up on a daily basis for a spot of (in ascending order of importance) swimming, sunbathing and al fresco shagging in the rough woodland behind the beach.
New to the scene is Franck (Pierre Deladonchamps), a handsome twentysomething more in the market for a partner than a sex buddy, but taking his chances in the meantime. His best chance, as he sees it, arrives in the form of Michel (Christophe Paou), an older, mustachioed swimmer on whom Franck becomes inordinately fixated. Michel is immediately flirtatious, though initially beholden to another sex partner; that only further stokes the younger man’s desire, which doesn’t waver even after, one balmy summer evening, he witnesses Michel murdering his mate in broad moonlight.
Franck tells no one what he has seen — least of all Michel himself, with whom he willingly enters a steamy no-strings commitment, built on bareback intercourse and never leaving the confines of the cruising ground. The threat of murder proves a sufficiently powerful aphrodisiac for Franck to pursue a deeper relationship with Michel. Persistently rebuffed, he instead fosters a sexless companionship with chubby, closeted beach patron Henri (an excellent Patrick D’Assumcao), whose suspicions about the psychotic Adonis edge ever closer to the truth — as do those of the police inspector who begins sniffing around when the corpse of Michel’s last victim washes ashore.
This is already far too psychologically cumbersome to qualify as porn: porn noir might be closer to the mark, given how Guiraudie’s stylish thriller framework plays the dangers of rough sex against its oneiric allure. One may choose to see Franck’s outlandish fatal attraction as an allegory for more widespread hazards of homosexuality: if repeatedly hooking up with a known murderer doesn’t kill him, having regular unprotected sex with a known player might do the trick in the long run. Not that Guiraudie and cinematographer Claire Mathon — whose luscious, sun-dappled but eerily remote widescreen compositions plant the entire film in an uncertain Eden — are passing judgement too harshly on these bronzed transgressors, nor those who delight in watching them. Hot and cold and provocative in more than just the expected ways, “Strangers by the Lake” presents even the most dishonest sex as an honest thrill.
HOTARIOUS: sean combs as lord wilcott in downton abbey (i really think he SHOULD be cast in this show)
NEW AB SOTO… #SERVE!
photos by @Leigh La Zha Zha
Jonathan Daniel Federico produced, directed, and edited for AB Soto West Coast to East Coast, East LA to Brooklyn, where the cholos are cholas and vice-versa in AB Soto’s latest initiation video #SERVE.
Cast: Georgia Sanford, Quintin Payton, Rify Royalty, Julius Anthony Rubio, and introducing Wallace!
Styled by AB Soto.
Make-up by Eduardo Martinez.
Music by Kirk Sutherland.
Producer, Director, Editor: Jonathan Daniel Federico.
Dir. of Photography, color-grading: Nathan Lee Bush
dr. bronner’s magic soapbox (2006)
Documentary filmmaker Sara Lamm explores the life of the mental institute escapee, master soap-maker, and self-proclaimed rabbi whose all-natural soap would become a counter-culture cleaning product sensation and a staple of health food stores everywhere. In 1947 – after emigrating to the United States from Germany in order to escape the Third Reich and fleeing from a mental institution where he was forced to endure electroshock therapy – Dr. Emanuel Bonner finally realized his destiny. An experienced soap maker whose faith in humanity hadn’t been shaken by the fact that his parents died in the Holocaust, Dr. Bonner began producing a multi-purpose cleaning product that would bring people together while providing them with tips for living a better live. The labels on Dr. Bronner’s Soaps were filled with inspiring prose borrowed largely from Jewish and Christian sources, and his company was one of the first socially conscious organizations to mass produce a popular product. While Dr. Bronner himself may be long gone, his popular soap lives on. For viewers curious to hear the tale of a man who dedicated himself to the betterment of the human race through the use of all-natural cleaning products, this documentary presents Dr. Bronner’s stranger-than-fiction story in greater detail than ever before. ~ Jason Buchanan, Rovi
the “guy next door” SUPER HOTNESS of BRIAN ROUSSEAU (via Guaizine)
Mr. Brian Rousseau is on GQ Italia on Le pillole di Stefano by Stefano Guerrini
Enjoy, LIKE and Share all the pics and keep following GUAIzine!
THIS HAPPENED!!! Ginger Rogers sings & dances “Love Will Keep Us Together” (for JUUL)
“Insane Choreography, Bizarre performances by the dancers, total camp fun. Be sure to watch the mustached dancer who is giving just a little bit more than the other three. My favorite moment is the choreography on the word “cause I really love you”. Sorry about the quality.” – Kevin Chamberlain















































































































