Ethan Shanfeld According to “All of Us Strangers” filmmaker Andrew Haigh, Paul Mescal and Andrew Scott hit it off immediately while on the set of the upcoming gay romance film. “There was chemistry between the two of them literally the second I saw them together,” Haigh said in an interview with Vanity Fair.
And in terms of the sex scenes: “Both of them were pretty fearless. There was no sense of them being afraid of approaching those scenes.
They knew how important they were.” Based on Taichi Yamada’s 1987 novel “Strangers,” the film follows screenwriter Adam (Scott), who, after an encounter with his neighbor Harry (Mescal), is mysteriously pulled back into his childhood home, where it appears his long-dead parents (played by Claire Foy and Jamie Bell) are actually alive — and haven’t aged in 30 years.
Haigh, who helmed the 2011 queer indie classic “Weekend” and served as a director and executive producer on HBO’s gay dramedy series “Looking,” indicated that the sex scenes in “All of Us Strangers” differ from those in his previous work. “I’ve been more objective in how I’ve shot sex scenes in the past,” he said. “Here, I really wanted to feel the subjective nature of having sex and what it feels like — the nervousness and the excitement and the physical sensation of being touched by someone else and what that does to you.” While the film is not autobiographical, Haigh related to the feeling of growing up gay in the ’80s and attempted to portray that period truthfully, especially as it pertains to Adam finally coming out to his parents.
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