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Nicole Kidman ‘can’t even talk about’ one scene in movie she had to pause after ‘having too many orgasms’

Nicole Kidman has disclosed that she “can’t even talk about” one especially sexual scene in her forthcoming x-rated film.

You may have somehow missed the news, Nicole Kidman, star of Little Big Lies, is starring in a pretty explicit film about a high-ranking CEO having a kinky affair with a much younger male intern.

If that kind of movie appeals to you, you can view the trailer here:

With a UK release date now scheduled for the new year, Babygirl sees Where the Crawdads made its theatrical debut in the United States on Christmas Day. Antonio Banderas portrays Romy’s husband Jacob, while Harris Dickinson, a singer, plays Samuel, the much younger intern and Romy’s (Kidman) future lover.

Because of the film’s intensely sexual content, focus has naturally shifted to Babygirl’s many sex scenes and the actors’ experiences filming them.

Kidman has not avoided answering questions about the sexual nature of the character, even admitting that she had to stop filming at one point because she “didn’t want to orgasm any more.” She is aware that this might be a particularly contentious topic when it comes to advertising the movie.

Nevertheless, it seems that there is a certain moment that is so obscene that the 57-year-old actress ‘can’t even talk about’ since it is that explicit.

Bringing up the topic in a recent interview with GQ, Kidman had a somewhat hesitant response when asked about the movie’s opening scene, which supposedly shows Romy pretending to have an orgasm during unsatisfying sex with her husband before masturbating to pornography with an S&M theme.

“I am unable to discuss that at all!” she answered.

Kidman was full of appreciation for both her co-stars and director Halina Reijn, even though she found it particularly difficult to talk about the film’s more graphic parts.

“I’m at a loss for words. But I adore Babygirl,” she remarked. “I love the film, so I don’t want to deny it or put it down.”

“It’s part of what I do,” she continued, explaining why she chose to play such an explicit role. Never once have I avoided depicting sexuality on TV. [Reijn] aimed to create a film about feminine pleasure and independence. I also desired to do it.

We can only speculate on the experience of seeing this movie in a theater.

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