Current:Home > Finance'Saltburn': Emerald Fennell, Jacob Elordi go deep on the year's 'filthiest, sexiest' movie -GrowthSphere Strategies
'Saltburn': Emerald Fennell, Jacob Elordi go deep on the year's 'filthiest, sexiest' movie
Charles Langston View
Date:2025-04-11 11:14:01
Brace yourself for the year’s most provocative movie.
Since premiering at Telluride Film Festival in August, “Saltburn” has sparked strong reactions from critics and audiences for its jaw-dropping scenes involving gravesite sex, menstrual blood, full-frontal dancing, and bodily fluids being guzzled from a bathtub.
“A woman came up to me after a screening a couple of weeks ago and said she felt like I’d reached my hand into her body and rummaged around her organs,” says writer/director Emerald Fennell, seated with actors Barry Keoghan and Jacob Elordi. “That’s the best compliment I’ve ever gotten.”
"Oh, goodness. No one's said that to me," Elordi says. "The main thing I hear is, ‘Would you drink the bathwater?’ " His response: "Absolutely, yeah. Of course.”
What is 'Saltburn' about? The 'strange puzzle box' of class and privilege
"Saltburn" (in select theaters now, nationwide Wednesday) is Fennell's incendiary follow-up to 2020's Oscar-winning "Promising Young Woman." That film was a pastel-colored rape revenge thriller, but this new movie takes a darkly satirical look at class warfare.
The story follows Oliver Quick (Keoghan), a working-class student at Oxford University who struggles to befriend his snooty, affluent classmates. But he is soon taken in by Felix Catton (Elordi), an affable Adonis who invites Oliver to his family's lavish English estate for the summer. To say much more would spoil the movie's many twists as tensions simmer over money and privilege and Oliver's obsession with Felix grows.
Fennell, 38, has long been intrigued by social climbers and the uber-elite. She was born in London to author Louise Fennell and famed jewelry designer Theo Fennell, whose clientele includes Elton John and Lady Gaga. She has also found success in Hollywood as an actress, playing Midge in last summer's "Barbie" and Camilla Parker Bowles in Netflix's "The Crown."
"For me, it's been a lifelong observational process of how minute the (class) categories in England are," Fennell says. "It's so stratified and complicated ‒ it's like a strange puzzle box. So it's always been interesting to me to look at that stuff."
The story resonated with "Euphoria" star Elordi, 26, who is in the midst of a breakthrough year thanks to his movies "Priscilla" and "The Sweet East."
"I grew up pretty blue-collar and I went to an all-boys Catholic school," Elordi says. "That was the first time I really noticed there was a difference between families, but not to the extent that is in this film."
'Priscilla':Cailee Spaeny, Jacob Elordi on why they avoided Austin Butler's 'Elvis'
Because of its setting and themes, "Saltburn" has frequently been compared to "The Talented Mr. Ripley" and "Brideshead Revisited." But Fennell was more so inspired by the hypnotic and polarizing work of filmmakers Yorgos Lanthimos ("The Killing of a Sacred Deer") and Peter Greenaway ("The Cook, the Thief, His Wife & Her Lover").
"I like things that are cold and hot at the same time," Fennell says. "Anyone who makes something destabilizing and beautiful is always going to be really interesting to me."
"You want people to have an experience," adds Keoghan, 31, an Oscar nominee for last year's "The Banshees of Inisherin." "You don't want to leave the cinema with your finger on the button, knowing what it was about. You want to be moved by it."
'Saltburn' cast members Barry Keoghan, Jacob Elordi didn't aim to 'shock' with that bathtub scene
"Saltburn" has won praise on social media for its attention to period detail. Fennell set the film in 2006 to show how even the wealthiest folks can't escape the tackiest trends. Characters have lava lamps, iPod Shuffles and BlackBerry phones. Boys double up their polo shirts, and girls wear Ugg boots and Juicy tracksuits. The film, too, is set to early-aughts indie-rock staples by MGMT, Cold War Kids and The Killers.
"I wore a Livestrong bracelet every day," Elordi says. "That was a brilliant touch there."
People also can’t stop talking about the movie’s infamous bathroom scene, in which Oliver spies on Felix as he soaks and masturbates in a tub. After he leaves, Oliver laps up the remaining bathwater and licks inside the drain.
“I just wanted to reach that next level of obsessiveness, and (Felix) being part of me or in me,” Keoghan says. “It made me understand obsession more, just the places he’d go to.”
15 must-see holiday movies:From 'The Marvels' and 'Napoleon' to 'Trolls 3' and 'Wish'
“It just feels so true,” Fennell adds. “You can’t pussyfoot around tonguing a drain. You can’t go in there coy. It has to be the absolute filthiest, sexiest, most horrifically intimate thing you’ve ever seen. Otherwise, it doesn’t work.”
For squirmy scenes like the bathtub, it was important to Fennell that they were approached completely seriously.
“There was no world in which it was funny or we were joking about it,” Elordi says. “It wasn’t a shock meant to make people’s skin crawl. It was all about devotion and love.”
veryGood! (94819)
Related
- Whoopi Goldberg is delightfully vile as Miss Hannigan in ‘Annie’ stage return
- Drake London’s shooting celebration violated longstanding NFL rules against violent gestures
- MLB playoff picture: Wild card standings, latest 2024 division standings
- Tupperware, company known for its plastic containers, files for Chapter 11 bankruptcy
- Trump issues order to ban transgender troops from serving openly in the military
- Refugees in New Hampshire turn to farming for an income and a taste of home
- Olight’s Latest Releases Shine Bright: A Look at the Arkfeld Ultra, Perun 3, and Baton Turbo
- Kentucky lawmaker recovering after driving a lawnmower into an empty swimming pool
- New Zealand official reverses visa refusal for US conservative influencer Candace Owens
- Kentucky lawmaker recovering after driving a lawnmower into an empty swimming pool
Ranking
- Google unveils a quantum chip. Could it help unlock the universe's deepest secrets?
- Hayden Panettiere breaks silence on younger brother's death: 'I lost half my soul'
- Hayden Panettiere breaks silence on younger brother's death: 'I lost half my soul'
- Powerball winning numbers for September 18: Jackpot rises to $176 million
- Are Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp down? Meta says most issues resolved after outages
- Weekly applications for US jobless benefits fall to the lowest level in 4 months
- Indiana woman pleads guilty to hate crime after stabbing Asian American college student
- Raven-Symoné Says Demi Lovato Was Not the Nicest on Sonny with a Chance—But Doesn't Hold It Against Her
Recommendation
Former Danish minister for Greenland discusses Trump's push to acquire island
Raven-Symoné Says Demi Lovato Was Not the Nicest on Sonny with a Chance—But Doesn't Hold It Against Her
Why Sean Diddy Combs No Longer Has to Pay $100 Million in Sexual Assault Case
Olight’s Latest Releases Shine Bright: A Look at the Arkfeld Ultra, Perun 3, and Baton Turbo
North Carolina justices rule for restaurants in COVID
Inmates stab correctional officers at a Massachusetts prison
Mission specialist for Titan sub owner to testify before Coast Guard
Los Angeles area sees more dengue fever in people bitten by local mosquitoes