The year’s most disturbing nudity in film
Celebrity skin on screen was more uncomfortable than titillating this year – as if actors displaying their bodies did not want to be in those bodies. Yet that was exactly why they held such power and fascination. It was not ogling nudity that excited audiences, it was seeing someone put on a mask or take one off and be (or become) their true selves — a rebirth as it were, literally, and in many films, figuratively.
The year in nudity was all about shedding skin and physical transformation. There were fetishes and fluids. There were masks and masochism. Things were more icky than erotic.
And while cinema and actors have become more comfortable with showing full nudity, many of the frontal shots this year — along with one particular rear view — were disturbing. These vivid, visceral images conveyed so much meaning about how we see our bodies and how we think others see our bodies. It is self-examination coupled with voyeurism, that affected the viewer more than any mere turn-on.
The nudity in this year’s crop of films is mostly unglamorous, which may be why viewers can relate to them. We see ourselves in their skin. These characters are damaged, and in pain — sometimes physically, always emotionally. As they open up, and bare themselves, they reveal their imperfections. It was impossible to look away.
It is always interesting when a filmmaker appears naked, repeatedly, throughout their own film. In her feature debut, “The Feeling That the Time for Doing Something Has Passed,” writer/director and editor Joanna Arrow stars as Ann, a submissive whose master is Allen (Scott Cohen). She’s first seen lying fully nude in bed with him and soon humps his sleeping body. “I love how you don’t do anything for me,” she intones, indicating the nature of their relationship, and providing a sense of the film’s dry, deadpan humor. She begs him to tell her what to do, and in various sessions, he instructs her to run to the wall naked or “bend over and spread her cheeks.” He even gags her in one scene. These moments showcase Ann’s submission, but in Arrow’s idiosyncratic drama, this is a sign of her strength and control. Arrow’s poker-faced performance and her extensive full nudity is an expression of her confidence. The perceived abuse here is desired and consensual, which is what makes it compelling. Moreover, the shots in “The Feeling That the Time for Doing Something Has Passed,” while artfully composed, are as flat and unaffected as the dialogue. Unlike the glossy “Babygirl,” this year’s other BDSM drama, Arrow’s film has a detached tone that will get on viewers’ nerves, if not under their skin.