Veteran actor Michael Douglas suggested that the filming of sex scenes has become stifled by the presence of intimacy coordinators in post-MeToo Hollywood.
Douglas, who himself is no stranger to sex scenes after having filmed erotic thrillers Fatal Attraction (1987) and Basic Instinct (1992), lamented to the Radio Times that the presence of intimacy coordinators on set has taken artistic license away from filmmakers. He did, however, acknowledge that actors and directors took things too far in the past and that some women were indeed subject to harassment.
“Sex scenes are like fight scenes, it’s all choreographed. In my experience, you take responsibility as the man to make sure the woman is comfortable, you talk it through. You say, ‘OK, I’m gonna touch you here if that’s all right’. It’s very slow but looks like it’s happening organically, which is hopefully what good acting looks like,” he added.
Douglas also said that actors who gained a bad reputation for intimacy scenes would be dealt with by losing work.
“But I talked to the ladies, [because] I did a few of those sex movies — sexual movies — and we joke about it now, what it would have been like to have an intimacy coordinator working with us,” he added.
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