Sign In. Play trailer Adult Drama. Director Lars von Trier. Lars von Trier. Top credits Director Lars von Trier. See more at IMDbPro. Trailer Nymphomaniac: Vol. Trailer 1. Photos Top cast Edit. Charlotte Gainsbourg Joe as Joe. Willem Dafoe L as L. Jamie Bell K as K. Uma Thurman Mrs. H as Mrs. Mia Goth P as P. Sophie Kennedy Clark B as B. More like this. Watch options. Storyline Edit.
Joe continues to tell to Seligman the story of her life. Joe seeks kinky sex, perversions and sadomasochism expecting to retrieve her sex drive. Then Joe is sent to therapy by her gynecologist but she does not admit that she is addicted to sex.
Meanwhile Seligman tells Joe that he is virgin and helps her to understand her actions. Joe believes that Seligman is her friend, but is he? Forget About Love. Not Rated. Did you know Edit. Trivia Charlotte Gainsbourg stated in an interview with the Washington Post that Lars von Trier personally asked her to record a version of the song "Hey Joe" for the end credits after he was unable to secure the rights to Jimi Hendrix 's version, something she immediately accepted.
Goofs P's earring disappears and reappears throughout her argument with Joe over the gun. Quotes Joe : We elevate those who say right but mean wrong, and mock those who say wrong but mean right. Crazy credits Near the very end of the credits there is this disclaimer: "None of the professional actors had penetrative sexual intercourse and all such scenes were performed by body doubles.
Alternate versions The director's cut adds roughly 57 minutes of footage, expanding some of the subplots. Sloane's "just desserts" are not what one would expect. Parental Guide. Beryl Reid is the middle aged nymphomaniac Kath who spots the amoral narcissistic drifter Mr Sloane Peter McEnery lying half naked sunbathing in the cemetery. Kath herself who lives by the cemetery is dressed seductively, a see thorough dress and we initially see her suggestively licking an ice lolly.
Kath invites Mr Sloane to become her lodger and quickly seduces him. Her elderly father, Dada recognizes Mr Sloane as the man who killed his employer and then disappeared. Mr Sloane is having a fine time womanizing, tormenting Dada and being playful with Kath and her brother Ed Harry Andrews who drops by every now and then.
Ed seems straight-laced but drives a pink Pontiac and makes Mr Sloane the chauffeur with a tight leather uniform. The film is supposed to be a grotesque, sexual black farce but the film reveals its hand too early. McEnery is too old as Mr Sloane, he should had been held back as an innocent charmer than unveiled as a murderer as soon as he met Dada. As for Ed, that pink Pontiac gave him away not matter how much of a country gent he tried to pass off as.
The ending was also rather abrupt and disappointing although I suspect a gay marriage ceremony would had been seen as shocking at the time. Reid and Andrews are siblings; she's a nymphomaniac and he's gay and McEnery is the eponymous Mr Sloane, the object of both their affections.
Webb is their ancient father and it's he who rubs Mr Sloane up the wrong way. Douglas Hickox directed without much imagination, relying too heavily on the material. Entertaining it certainly is but great? Best you see it on stage before making up your mind. If you haven't seen this superb film - put it to the top of your "must view" list!
Featuring two of Britain's best character actors, the late Beryl Reid and the late Harry Andrews, this scintillating black comedy is based on Joe Orton's wonderful play of the same name. Reid is marvellous as aging nymphomaniac Kath and Harry Andrews provides a superb foil as her roue brother Ed, who both attempt to secure the sexual services of their libidinous lodger, Sloane played by Peter McEnery. Set in an eerie graveyard lodgehouse and with Alan Webb as their grubby father this brilliant film has gained cult status since its release over 30 years ago and is the only film I can watch - and enjoy - repeatedly.
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