Keira Knightley Issues Nudity Sex Ban For Male Directors!
Actress Keira Knightley is ready to say NO to nudity when it comes to male directors for the rest of her career. Read on and see why Keira Knightley issued a nudity sex ban…
CelebnMovies247.com reports that The Pirates of the Caribbean star says she’s done doing nudity in movies — well, mostly.
Speaking on the Chanel Connects podcast, Keira Knightley, 35, revealed that shortly after having her first child she put a strict “no nudity clause” in her film contracts.
Keira’s “no nudity clause” in full effect when it comes to working with certain directors:
I don’t have an absolute ban [on filming nude scenes], but I kind of do with men. It’s partly vanity and also it’s the male gaze.
Keira has been fairly open with her body, appearing partially nude or engaged in sexual activity in a number of films throughout her career, including The Hole, Domino, Atonement, A Dangerous Method, Colette, The Aftermath — all of which were directed by men.
Those days are over, Knightley would like to stay away from “those horrible s*x scenes where you’re all greased up and everybody is grunting…I’m not interested in doing that.”
Keira has mostly avoided that, but the more prurient scenes aren’t necessarily offensive to the actress, they just aren’t for her.
She explains:
Saying that there are times where I go, ‘Yeah, I completely see where this s*x would be really good in this film and you basically just need somebody to look hot,’ so, therefore, you can use somebody else. Because I’m too vain, and the body has had two children now, and I’d just rather not stand in front of a group of men naked.
She used male director vision vs females.
For example, the Amazons were envisioned by Patty Jenkins for Wonder Woman and later that year by Zach Snyder for Justice League. World of difference.
Here is a fantastic example of the difference between the male and female gaze.
Patty Jenkins’ Amazon warriors on the left. Zack Snyder’s on the right. pic.twitter.com/fRDkV8dFLe— Melissa Silverstein (@melsil) November 12, 2017