

Afterwards, he said to me, 'I've murdered people on camera. Don Stark, who plays Oscar, is one of the nicest, kindest people that you will ever meet, and he plays such a scumbag on the show and he did not like filming that scene. At the table read, there were a few actors who actually teared up. LaRosa said of the scene, "That was so terrible to film. The relationship also creates a complication for Jude when his father finds out, and basically disowns him. His thing was about letting people in and being himself and taking off the mask. It's not like he was like, "I can't, I'm not macho." that was never really his thing. I think then you're really telling a story about shame and you're exploring all the negative aspects and confusion around sexuality, when really that's not what the story was about. I couldn't live in that world very long as a storyteller because I think then it gets depressing. I think there is a reality to the fact that sometimes as a gay person you can be with someone else who is either gay or bisexual or just not sure or not admitting. I knew that their story wasn't just a "we're a secret couple" story.

Antonello explained, "Jude basically puts his foot down and fights for he wants, telling Zero, 'I can't be with you unless you come out as the gay man I fell in love with, not this star basketball player with a religious facade.'" With Zero not comfortable making their relationship public, Jude ends it. The characters become involved in a sexual relationship that hits a crossroads when Jude demands a level of commitment that Zero is not ready to give. I mean, you guys have got to get in the game! So, you had that first little kiss in the beginning, then they back off and then they attack each other and it's on! Belts are off, shirts are off and we melted the Internet. To Brent and Adam's credit, I was like, "Okay, we're going to shoot this scene, and you can't be pussies." If Logan and Rob, who play Jelena and Terrence, are going to yank each other's clothes up and hold them up against walls and pull down zippers with their teeth. They were both each treated exactly the same. In that episode where Jude and Zero had sex, we had a sex scene with Jelena and Terrence as well, and it was just as hot. And they don't have some isolated story off to the side: They're scheming, they’re making bad decisions." Additionally, the sex scenes between Jude and Zero-which David-Elijah Nahmod of Echo Magazine called "startlingly no-holds-barred"-are as explicit as those of the heterosexual couples on the show.
SUB ROSA 2014 مشاهدة فيلم FULL
you've seen the gay characters on TV and they don't have the relationships or anything like that." LaRosa wanted to give Jude and Zero full lives like other characters on the show, in contrast to Melrose Place 's gay character Matt Fielding, who LaRosa said "was always holding someone's hair back and giving them tea and advice." With Jude and Zero positioned as frontburner characters, LaRosa explained, "Everyone has a motive, everyone has an agenda. Antonello said, "midway through the season, we found out where the storyline was going between me and Zero. Senn and Antonello were also unaware that their characters would become romantically involved when they joined the show. Though Zero initially has an affair with scheming Devil Girls captain Jelena Howard ( Logan Browning) and rebuffs a kiss from Jude, Zero's jealousy over Jude's interest in photographer's assistant Danny ( Scott Evans) prompts Zero to kiss Jude in " Unguarded".
SUB ROSA 2014 مشاهدة فيلم SERIES
Series creator James LaRosa described the season's three new characters-Jude, Zero, and Lionel Davenport ( Jodi Lyn O'Keefe)-as "all twisted in their own way." At one point, LaRosa called Jude "the prime suspect in Olivia's murder", and Senn began to suspect that Zero might be the killer. In its 2014 second season, Hit the Floor introduced Adam Senn as devious forward Zero, and Brent Antonello as his junior agent, Jude Kinkade.
