As she boards the plane bound for home, it’s difficult to imagine how what just happened to Tara could ever be reduced to a party anecdote of her own. Then again, you could have said the same of me on the long cab ride from the hospital back to my apartment.
‘How to Have Sex’ Puts Unflinching Focus On a Frighteningly Familiar Story
With every twist and turn of Molly Manning Walker's directorial debut, a one-night-stand or drunken exploit gone unexamined becomes that much clearer.
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One night in my early twenties, I went out drinking with new friends and woke up alone in the hospital. My belongings—a phone and a small purse—were placed in a ziplock bag at the foot of the bed and the clothes on my back were caked in calcified vomit. Hours earlier, I’d been denied entry to a party on a yacht because I was too inebriated to stand. The friends went on without me and as the boat departed from the dock, I fell in the parking lot. A concerned bystander called an ambulance.
I only asked one question when I came to at the hospital: “Was I sexually assaulted?” The answer was no. Still, I blamed myself for my indiscretion. Then, as penance, I fashioned the story into an amusing anecdote to be told at parties. “Next thing I know, I wake up and a nurse in Looney Tune scrubs is telling me I owe over a thousand dollars for an ambulance I didn’t even call,” I’d ramp up, laughing along with my audience as if we were all in on the same joke. The punchline: I guess a handle of Tito’s isn’t actually that cheap! With retrospect and strikingly similar revelations from friends, it seems as if this is part and parcel of a young woman’s experience. Reckoning with the fact that our pursuit of liberation is often accompanied by a steep price–and our own arguably undeserved remorse–is done on nights like these. Molly Manning Walker’s directorial debut, How to Have Sex, brings them into unflinching focus.
Though it may seem like one at first glance, How to Have Sex isn’t a cautionary tale. Instead, it’s a scathing indictment of a sex-obsessed society that still has no concept of what consent truly is—or isn’t. Even more so though, the film functions as a kaleidoscope of your own blurred memories—with every twist and turn, a one-night-stand, drunken exploit, or another memory from a youth gone unexamined becomes that much clearer. Manning Walker, who also wrote the film, took inspiration from the holidays of her own teen years wherein she and her friends engaged in excess only to realize as adults that they had internalized trauma from things they’d seen too young and weren’t equipped to process. “We all recognized that we were uncomfortable but were pretending to be like, ‘whoop this is so great!’” Manning Walker recalled at a recent screening in New York.