Babygirl review: Nicole Kidman to Challengers: Hold my beer
Sex in cinema is back, baby. 2024 has been a banging year at the movies thanks to steamy fare like Rose Glass's neo-noir thriller Love Lies Bleeding, Luca Guadagnino's love-triangle drama Challengers, Sean Baker's sex-worker-centered comedy Anora, and last, but certainly not least, Halina Reijn's May-December drama Babygirl. Written and directed by Bodies Bodies Bodies helmer Reijn, Babygirl has earned dynamic buzz out of its Venice Film Festival premiere, from which Nicole Kidman was awarded the Volpi Cup for her riveting performance as the female lead. As she has in daring productions like Eyes Wide Shut, The Paperboy, and Big Little Lies, Kidman rejects her polished persona as a megawatt star (and AMC advocate), embracing a messy journey of sex and danger. Featured Video For You SEE ALSO: The 25 best movies of 2024, and where to watch them Yet Babygirl stands out among these other sexy films and series by keeping the playfulness of fucking fiercely at the center of its willfully problematic romance. In that, even the seediest sequence has a bit of sweetness ground in. Babygirl genderswaps a common May-December dynamic. Director Halina Reijn and Nicole Kidman. Credit: A24 At first blush, Babygirl's premise sounds almost tediously familiar: A high-powered CEO's family and job are threatened, thanks to a torrid affair with a lusty young intern. Except Reijn genderswaps these roles, so the mighty CEO isn't a snarling Michael Douglas type; she's played by a crisp, cool Kidman. And rather than a curvy nymph swanning into their new workplace in a snug pencil skirt, Triangle of Sadness' Harris Dickinson strolls in with a blazer and a bored expression. And just like that, the expectations of this erotic tale are thrown off-kilter. Romy Mathis (Kidman) seems to have it all: a posh Hamptons home; a luxury Manhattan apartment; a handsome, doting husband (Antonio Banderas); two lovely teen daughters, Isabel (Esther McGregor) and Nora (Vaughan Reilly); and a high-power job, wh
Babygirl review: Nicole Kidman to Challengers: Hold my beer