Catherine Hardwicke On Shooting Sex Scenes
Latest“Not to point to the elephant in the room,” said moderator Jay Fernandez to Catherine Hardwicke today, “but what does that have to do with being a woman?”
He was talking about the relationship she had with young actors, often described as intimate. Shiloh Fernandez (no relation), who appears in her just-released Red Riding Hood, was also on the stage at Hardwicke’s South By Southwest event, and he had been raving about the way she rolls up her sleeves and connects with her cast. “She has a mind that isn’t shut off yet,” he said.
Hardwicke deflected the gender question — she said she’d seen Richard Linklater be plenty sensitive with his actors. For whatever reason, at a festival that appears to be at least two thirds male (an unscientific guess), her audience today was about half made up of women. Before them, Hardwicke was loose, friendly, engaged with the audience, whom she spoke to without condescension, and had a way of flipping her hair that was incongruously charming.
I haven’t seen Red Riding Hood, but as it happens, shortly before the event began I read this piece in The Daily Beast. In it, Chris Lee accuses Hardwicke of employing the “male gaze,” with the camera constantly creeping up on Amanda Seyfried, and said the film “brainwashes teenage girls by sexualizing certain childhood awakenings.”