Shame (2011, Steve
McQueen)
A movie about sex. What comes to mind when presented with
such a topic? Often, the gut responses are pornographic films. Those movies are
definitely about sex, even though the physical act is treated as gratuitous and
the purpose of which is strictly immediate self-satisfaction, or stimulation,
for the viewer. Sex, the act and
everything about it from genitalia, foreplay, to positions is also the butt of
jokes in comedies. The American Pie
movies immediately spring to mind or the countless other so-called raunchy
comedies. Horror films also depict sexual intercourse in gratuitous ways. There
are probably not enough films that treat the topic in a serious, honest manner.
They do indeed exist, but the mere fact that raunchy comedies, slasher and
pornography flicks are a dime a dozen is indicative of how the issue of sex is
treated in film today. Now, how about not only treating sex seriously, but more
specifically as a problem, a totally uncontrollable one? Englishmen Steve
McQueen returns two years after the unforgettable Hunger with Shame,









