![]() William actually did invent the first polygraph machine with help from Elizabeth, and early on, we see the couple tinkering with their invention, which functions by fastening a strap around the wearer’s chest (perfect for shots of heaving bosoms, of which there are many). How will they ever be able to admit to each other those things they can barely admit to themselves? But perhaps my favorite erotic moment comes early on in the film, as Elizabeth and William are attempting to figure out their feelings for Olive. The film contains a number of creative, retro erotic moments: William and Elizabeth getting very turned on as they watch Olive get paddled during a sorority-initiation rite their first three-way in an empty Harvard auditorium and their nascent exploration of kink and BDSM, including plenty of bodysuit-and-rope play that would later come to inspire Wonder Woman’s iconic costume. As we learn in the film, the comic books were inspired by his polyamorous, BDSM relationship with his psychologist wife, Elizabeth (Rebecca Hall), and their lab assistant turned lover Olive Byrne (Bella Heathcote) back in the 1920s. ![]() Professor Marston and the Wonder Women tells the true ( ish) story of Wonder Woman creator and former Harvard psychologist William Moulton Marston. And Professor Marston and the Wonder Women (out November 13) gives us - against all odds - the sexy lie-detector test. Call Me by Your Name gave us the sexy peach. It takes a special kind of film to take an otherwise unsexy object and canonize it eternally in the annals of sex-scene history.
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