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By setting Babygirl’s subspace explorations against a corporate, hetero-mono-normative backdrop, Reijn also makes a political point. However ephemeral, subspace is a consent-bound altered state ...
“Babygirl” follows Kidman’s character Romy — who is a married tech company CEO — as she engages in a risky affair with an intern at her company named Samuel (played by Dickinson).
“Babygirl” writer/director Halina Reijn (“Bodies Bodies Bodies”) walks us through the movie’s erotic kink scenes and the unique way she captured masturbation on screen. Join our Watch Party!
Here, “Babygirl” appears to understand a common reality behind the kink: many accomplished, strong women (and men) want to turn their brains off and fully submit to the right Dom.
What “Babygirl” gets into, in the scene where Romy and Samuel meet up for an extended hotel-room tryst, is the shivery ambivalence Romy feels, her alternating current of fear and desire, ...
Discussing “Babygirl” with Vanity Fair in August, Kidman said acting in the project left her feeling “ragged.” “At some point I was like, ‘I don’t want to be touched,’” she recalled.
Critics Pick ‘Babygirl’ Review: Nicole Kidman Is Fearless in an Erotic Office Drama About the Age of Control Halina Reijn's adultery drama recalls films from "Unfaithful" to "9½ Weeks," but ...
Watching “Babygirl” won’t land you on the naughty list. The R-rated thriller (now in theaters) is a tantalizing ode to female desire and liberation, following a married CEO named Romy ...
Babygirl's milk scene is where things really begin to take off between Romy and Samuel, with it occurring shortly after they ...
“Babygirl” was released on Christmas Day and follows Romy, a high-powered CEO who has a steamy affair with her much younger intern Samuel. Kidman, Dickinson, Antonio Banderas and Esther Rose ...
Editor’s Note: The following story contains some spoilers for “Babygirl,” now in theaters. Nicole Kidman and writer/director Halina Reijn take a leap of faith into the (hopefully) orgasmic ...
Babygirl is an exhilarating thriller that’s piercingly funny. Its real radicalism comes in its bracingly honest approach to sex, power, and discovering what makes you tick.