3-Disc Set. 31 men and 15 scenes. A collection of Falcon Studios` hottest classic bareback action! Dozens of dicks, quarts of cum, and never a condom in sight!
You may remember some of these handsome guys , they are classic studs with tans, big dicks, tight asses and insatiable sex drives. Now you can revisit some of the hottest bareback gay fucking.
Academy cadet Mac Turner gets ravaged in the school's gymnasium showers by his coach, the incredible, towering blonde power-house, Josh Kincaid. Sex-initiate Turner recruits his buddy, fellow cadet, blonde Eric Nolte, to the manly joys of good, stiff dicks, hungry throats and willing assholes. And Nolte's an anxious pupil!
Collection of four short films from Falcon Studios. "Boots" — Falcon favorite Sky Dawson returns to the screen, with a gym-perfected physique, to co-star with Kristen Bjorn. A man of many excesses, Sky explodes in a gut-wrenching 15-spurt climax. "Biker's Liberty" — The sailor and the biker, it's a classic fantasy, a high-volume wet dream! Tim Kramer, the bike-riding leather man, and Mac Turner, in swabbie whites, come together for a sizzling encounter of domination and willing submission. "Beach Rovers" — Kristen Bjorn is now teamed with everybody's favorite young stud Jon King. Kris and Jon connect at the beach, but are soon at home in Kris' shower. "The Big Surprise" — Lee Ryder wraps it up with some solo action and a dirty mouth.
Twenty-Five Scenes of Vintage 1970's Action from the Falcon Vault. Here are some of the gems that helped build the Falcon empire in its early years. Featuring Legends of Male Erotica like Roger, Dick Fisk, Casey Donovan, Scott O'Hara, Sky Dawson, Kris Bjorn, and Mac Turner ... plus many, many more!
Seed Money is the story of Chuck Holmes, a San Francisco pornographer turned philanthropist. Holmes helped shaped and create gay identity in the years after Stonewall, and later became a major contributor to gay advocacy groups like the Human Rights Campaign and the LGBT Victory Fund, only to find later in life that while his money was welcome in philanthropic circles, he sometimes wasn't.