Matt bomer gay sex
Home / porn sex / Matt bomer gay sex
You see Tim leverage sex into an invitation to a powerful D.C. party. So that's why I think it was important to show it and not just kind of drift off away from the bed and out the billowing curtain of the window.
RN: Dan and I discussed how, while we didn't want to romanticize oppression, there is also something stimulating about an outlawed behavior.
After both men finish, Hawk immediately shuts down any prolonged connection, giving Eddie a fake name and leaving. We had lots of conversations about when and why a sex scene is taking place.
Where did that come from?
RN: Dan? Oscar Wilde said it before me: "Sex is about power." We tried for every decision in Fellow Travelers to be based in story or character development. But there's still something that happens, that X-factor, when the actors come to set on the day of shooting and bring themselves to it, their experiences and decisions and idiosyncrasies.
[both laugh] I think the folding came from Thomas's book, but how it was directed is a Dan question.
DM: He was asserting his dominance over Tim. He's setting up this dom-sub relationship right off the bat. Sex is like any other aspect of a character. They're both really seasoned actors, and once we had the choreography down, then they'd bring these grace notes to it.
‘Fellow Travelers’ Sex Scenes: Matt Bomer Dominates Jonathan Bailey in a Steamy Display of Power
Matt Bomer‘s character in Showtime‘s new series Fellow Travelers, Hawkins “Hawk” Fuller, is a man who likes to take things. In the next two sex scenes, he's in private and able to be tender as well as kinky, playful as well as aggressive.
And if the power dynamics weren’t clear to the audience yet, as Hawk takes Tim in the bed — thrusting his hand down the younger man’s pants to pleasure him — he asks Tim, “Are you my boy?” Tim is very much Hawk’s boy. It's Washington; these are political people engaged in political theater.
In the scene where Hawk and Tim have sex for the first time, Hawk first makes Tim take Hawk's pant off, fold them, and place them neatly on the bed. So it wasn't just, Gay men have this kind of sex, so let's put that in the show. [laughs]
That scene included a lot of other moments that felt spontaneous—and thus really authentic to the way real people have sex—like when Matt licks Jonathan's armpit.
He doesn't want to cuddle with the guy he just picked up or exchange phone numbers. Marie Kondo is going to get the vapors.
RN: There's a quote. In Fellow Travelers‘s premiere episode, “You’re Wonderful” — now streaming on Paramount+ — we watch in flashbacks to the 1950s as Hawk stalks potential hookups like a hunter would prey.
When Hawk goes cruising at the public toilets in Lafayette Park, he's compelled to do that. Hawk is in command. It's in this landscape that two Washington, D.C. workers—the charming power player Hawkins "Hawk" Fuller (Matt Bomer) and the mousey Christian conservative Tim Laughlin (Jonathan Bailey)—begin a tumultuous relationship that spans decades, through to the AIDS crisis of the 1980s.
Because it was just so real.