Having been forced to cancel last year’s Cannes due to the pandemic, 2021 is proving to be a happy nude year for the festival with this edition’s most talked-about film, “Benedetta,” featuring a pair of romping nuns.
Even the outwardly gentle period drama “Mothering Sunday” is unabashed about displaying the human body in all its glory, with both Josh O’Connor (“The Crown”) and Odessa Young (“Shirley”) going full-frontal in the film.
Perhaps it’s a response to the time we’re living in, where even Cannes’ trademark cheek-to-cheek kisses on the red carpet are now verboten, although Husson, who filmed “Mothering Sunday” between the U.K.’s first and second lockdowns last fall, puts the film’s liberal nudity down to her (French/Spanish) upbringing.
“I have a family culture of nudity in the sense that nudity was always something very natural and nothing to be ashamed of,” she told Variety. “And I try to do that in my films, when I can, when it’s relevant. Just because I do think we’re very touching and beautiful as human beings.
Related Stories
VIP+The Great Cable Rollup That Will Never Be
Los Angeles Chamber Orchestra Receives $2 Million Gift for New Orchestral Works by Media Composers
“But I think the male gaze has hijacked nudity in the sense that it makes it more than it is in terms of importance in life,” Husson continued. “I think nudity is also about intimacy and how comfortable you are with your own identity.”
Popular on Variety
Although O’Connor is best known for his turn as the buttoned-up Prince Charles, he is no stranger to stripping off on screen, having appeared nude in “God’s Own Country.” O’Connor stressed the narrative importance of the scenes in which he and Young are undressed in “Mothering Sunday,” saying: “They tell so much of the story. They tell stuff that no writer could write dialogue for.”
Young, who in one memorable scene wanders through a country house — and even eats a pie — entirely unclothed, was equally unperturbed by the task. “I think that we, as actors, get asked to do really weird shit all the time,” she said. “And in fact being nude is, like, not weird.”
Husson says she chose not to use an intimacy co-ordinator for the film’s sex scenes, citing her own experience as an actor, dancer and choreographer. “I understand the need for intimacy coordinators because there has been abuse,” she said. “[But] I think that for some of us it doesn’t make sense to put yet someone else between us and the actors.”
“For me, the body is a tool, and you choreograph, you work the muscle memory, and then you move on and you work on the more emotional side of things,” she said. “And I don’t want to have to explain that to yet another person. Believe me it’s tiring enough to have to get things out of your brain to one person so the more intermediaries I have… I just think it’s up to the level of confidence in the director and the level of trust that he creates or she creates with the actors.”
As for what drew her to the project, which is based on Graham Swift’s 2016 novel of the same name about three families coping with the loss of their sons during World War I, Husson said: “I didn’t even realize it was a period film until sometime into the game in the sense that, for me, it was about the characters and it was about the human connection, and it was about grief, and how to stay human and alive.
“How do you survive life and hardships, you know?” she continued. “And I just loved the elegance of the script. And the story showed that no matter how much money you have, life hammers you.”
Read More About:
Jump to CommentsMore from Variety
New York Game Awards Sets Remedy Entertainment’s Sam Lake as Legend Award Recipient
Apple Vision Pro Foray Into Film Won’t Define the Device
New York Game Awards Set 2025 Ceremony (EXCLUSIVE)
2024 Was a Record Year for A24 and Neon. 2025 Will Be Tougher
Most Popular
‘SNL’ Roasts Elon Musk for Saying Trump Task Force Workers Will Get No Pay: ‘You Can’t Be Surprised the White African Guy’s First Idea Is Slavery…
‘The Substance’ Director Coralie Fargeat Pulls Film From Camerimage Following Festival Head’s Comments About Women
Donald Trump and Joe Biden Bond Over Hating Being President on ‘SNL’ as Alec Baldwin Debuts as RFK Jr.: ‘I Got a Dead Dolphin in My Car…
‘Cobra Kai’ Bosses on Killing Off [SPOILER] in Season 6 Part 2, What’s Next for Kreese and the Show’s Endgame
Warner Bros. Discovery, NBA Settle Legal Fight Over TV Rights
The Lonely Island Teams With Charli XCX for New Song ‘Here I Go,’ About Suburban Couples Who Love to Call the Cops
Oscars Predictions 2025: A Post-Election Race in Pursuit of Happiness
Barney Actor Says ‘I Laughed’ When the Ku Klux Klan ‘Banned Their Kids From Ever Watching Barney Again’ Because of His Casting
‘Grey's Anatomy' Star Jake Borelli on Levi Schmitt’s Exit and Almost Refusing His Coming Out Storyline: ‘I Wasn't Ready to Talk About’ It on a…
Mike Tyson Says He ‘Almost Died’ Ahead of Jake Paul Fight: ‘Lost Half My Blood and 25 Lbs in Hospital’
Must Read
- Music
Grammy Nominations 2025: Beyonce Leads With 11 Nods
- Film
Mattel’s ‘Wicked’ Movie Dolls Mistakenly List Porn Site on Packaging
- Film
With ‘Christmas Eve in Miller’s Point,’ Director Tyler Taormina Makes an Instant Holiday Classic
- TV
How ‘Office Ladies’ Transformed From a BFF Hang for Jenna Fischer and Angela Kinsey to One of the Biggest Podcasts in the World
Sign Up for Variety Newsletters
By providing your information, you agree to our Terms of Use and our Privacy Policy.We use vendors that may also process your information to help provide our services. // This site is protected by reCAPTCHA Enterprise and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.Variety Confidential
ncG1vNJzZmiukae2psDYZ5qopV9nfXN9jp%2BgpaVfo7K4v46mpq2glae2r7OMrKynnJGuequ70qFkqJufo7uwvoynrJ2hpK56cn6SbmdqbmZnfXA%3D