“Basic Instinct” director Paul Verhoeven
complained on Sunday that Hollywood had stopped making “challenging”
movies featuring provocative sex as it clamored to cash in on mainstream
audiences.
The Dutch filmmaker, famous for a slew
of films that shocked audiences with their sex and violence, said
studios chasing ratings were now mainly interested in the lucrative
“PG-13” market.
“If you say it has to be PG-13, there
are a lot of things you cannot do. You cannot be provocative, you cannot
be controversial, you cannot be sexual, erotic, in a direct way,” he
told AFP.
“It all has to be suggestive, elliptic
and whatever. And so then the movies become neutral and the movies are
not challenging you in any way.”
The legendary filmmaker was behind
ultraviolent 1980s and 1990s classics “RoboCop,” “Total Recall” and
“Starship Troopers,” as well as erotic films like “Showgirls” and “Basic
Instinct.”
He spoke out on the red carpet for the
Los Angeles-based AFI Fest screening of his latest controversial film
“Elle,” a twisted cocktail of sex, violence and dark comedy that is
France’s pick to compete for the best foreign film Oscar.
With its radical take on the aftermath
of a brutal sex crime, the movie garnered rave reviews when it debuted
at the Cannes Film Festival and drew plenty of dark laughs from the
audience on Sunday.
It tells the story of a powerful woman
played by iconic French actress Isabelle Huppert, who is violently raped
and embarks on a dangerous game with her attacker.
– Male nudity –
In the United States, the rating of
movies is a voluntary system managed by the Motion Picture Association
of America and the National Association of Theatre Owners.
A film runs the risk of being R-rated
for use of the “f-word” as a verb, a graphic depiction of hard drug use,
full male nudity, sex or extreme and graphic violence.
Verhoeven revealed how he had originally
intended to make the movie in Hollywood before numerous American
actresses turned down the lead role — fearing it too controversial —
forcing him to relocate to France.
“There’s no problem in France. As a director you can do what you want,” he told AFP.
“I escaped to France because I couldn’t find anything that was for me challenging. Why bother, you know?”
Huppert, 63, who some critics say has
delivered the performance of her career in “Elle,” was being honored as
part of the screening for a glittering career that has seen her appear
in more than 100 movies and television productions.
Verhoeven described Huppert as “the most fantastic actor I’ve ever worked with, on a level that I did not know existed.”
Michael Barker, co-founder of Sony
Pictures Classics, which is distributing the movie, said Huppert “has
made films in so many countries around the world and her talent as an
actress has grown and I’d say there’s pretty much nothing she is afraid
of.”
Huppert said she felt “grateful” to be
honored, adding: “Each time something like this happens to me I still
feel a little bit surprised.”
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