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Jan 8 2020



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Admit it, you just can't look away from these taboo onscreen relationships . Incest — be it between siblings, cousins, step-family members, or parents with sons and daughters — is one of those icky subject matters we just can't help but be fascinated by. And it's been portrayed in films more than a few times. If you're curious, here are some of the most memorable examples of incestuous relationships in movies.
Siblings Chris and Cathy, the product of incest themselves, begin an incestuous relationship due in large part to being locked in an attic together (as they went through puberty) by their evil grandmother in the 1987 film based on the 1979 novel by V. C. Andrews.
Hyper-sexualized step-siblings Kathryn and Sebastian make a wager that involves sleeping together in this high school-set 1999 adaption of the 1782 novel Les Liaisons Dangereuses by Pierre Choderlos de Laclos.
Fifteen-year-old Oscar falls in love with his stepmother, Eve, played by Sigourney Weaver, in this 2002 film.
In this steamy Paris-set 2003 film, twins Théo and Isabelle sleep naked together, and it's insinuated that their relationship is sexual, especially as American exchange student Matthew enters the mix.
Julianne Moore stars as Barbara Baekeland, a mother who attempts to cure her gay son, Antony, played by Eddie Redmayne, by seducing him in this 2007 drama based on real events. (There's even a super creepy threesome scene.)
Daniel Day-Lewis stars as a single dad who doesn't realize his isolated existence with his daughter has resulted in her becoming infatuated with him in this 2005 drama.
A promiscuous widow and her 17-year-old son begin an incestuous relationship in this 2004 French-Austrian-Portuguese-Spanish film.
In the very loose '90s adaption of Emma , Cher ends up with Josh, her ex-stepbrother, which is only sort of weird.
In the 2013 Canadian-German sci-fi film based on the first book of Cassandra Clare's The Mortal Instruments series, demon fighters Clary and Jace fall in love over a series of life-and-death encounters, only to discover too late that they are actually siblings. Despite lots of kissing and other un-sibling like behavior, they have to figure out how to be together without actually . . . being together. (Spoiler alert: they later find out they aren't actually related . . . not that this fact stopped them from majorly making out).
In the 2013 drama based on a Pulitzer Prize-winning play, cousins Little Charles and Ivy are secretly in love with each other before it comes out that they are actually brother and sister.
Princess Leia and Luke Skywalker share a kiss before discovering they are twins in the first Star Wars movie.
Eli ( Owen Wilson ) said it best: "I did find it odd when you said you were in love with her. She's married you know . . . and she's your sister." To be fair, Margot ( Gwyneth Paltrow ) is Richie's ( Luke Wilson ) adopted sister in the 2001 Wes Anderson movie.
In Guillermo del Toro's 2015 gothic horror film Crimson Peak , Tom Hiddleston and Jessica Chastain play brother and sister Thomas and Lucille, who have an eerily close relationship — to the point that Thomas's wife Edith ( Mia Wasikowska ) has to fear for her life due to Lucille's jealousy.
A very young Brooke Shields and Christopher Atkins play cousins who survive a shipwreck and then fall in love in this 1980 romantic adventure drama film.
Eva Green plays a woman who gives birth to a clone of her late lover (played by Matt Smith) and then has sex with him when he's an adult in this 2010 film.
In the onscreen adaptions of the novel of the same title by Vladimir Nabokov (there are two film versions, one 1962 and one in 1997), a 30-something man named Humbert Humbert marries the mother of a 12-year-old girl he hopes to become sexually involved with.
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When I was in High School in Jos, I lived in a hostel where the housemother banned students in her hostel from dating each other. She felt that it was incestuous. The students found this ridiculous because those dating were not related by blood. What we had were couples in the hostel creeping around and finding ways to spend time together without being caught. I remember once when the hostel bus came to pick us up from school and one of the couples was almost caught together. The girl was sitting on the lap of the boy, and luckily, they were alerted before any serious consequences could accrue.

We had fun with the whole concept of incest. It almost became an exclamation point. ‘Oh, that is so incestuous!’, ‘That is incest’, and so on. What is incest? It is sexual activity between closely related people. It is taboo in most societies. Some societies go as far as creating laws that criminalise incest. Why do some societies outlaw incest? Mostly, it is to protect society and the family structure as we know it.

While there is documented evidence of the biological consequences of incest, which include genetic issues and birth defects, there are some persons who do not believe the evidence and also argue that not all relationships reproduce. But in some cases, such as where step-relations are involved (step-siblings, step-parents, etc) a relationship is still taboo.
Some time ago, I watched a documentary on the Pakistani culture of marrying first cousins. The documentary focused on cases in the United Kingdom where the children of such cousins were suffering with very debilitating diseases. As much as some of the parents had suffered the loss of their children, some of them refused to recognise the fact that the genetic issues their children were having were attributable to the genetic makeup of both parents. Some accepted the suffering of their children as God’s will. It was very sad to watch but how do you argue with a person who is a product of such a relationship and has no health issues to show for it? It is an uphill task!

Lately, there have been quite a few cases of men arrested for having sexual relationships with their underage daughters and some going as far as impregnating them. Could it be that the act is acceptable in their cultures? Or is it simply a lack of self-control? Of course, when they are caught their acts are the work of the devil. It is supposed to be the case that people with some family affinity are not attracted to each other. But for these persons, there are no inhibitions. With certain familial relationships, the balance of power is skewed such that there can be no real consent: a father and child, an elder sibling and a younger sibling, etc. These are the cases that we hear about and express shock.

But how about incest between two consenting adults? What does society feel about that? There have been arguments from some quarters that two consenting adults should have the right to private life and therefore who they choose to have a sexual relationship with is no nobody’s business. They wish to extend the argument in support of same-sex relationships to incest between consenting adults. In my mind it is not quite the same thing.

Section 3(1)(b) of the Matrimonial Causes Act states as follows:

‘Subject to the provisions of this section, a marriage that takes place after the commencement of this Act is void in any of the following cases but not otherwise, that is to say, where – … the parties are within the prohibited degrees of consanguinity or, subject to section 4 of this Act, of affinity…

Who are those referred to in Section 4? Subsections 1 and 2 provide:
(1) Where two persons who are within the prohibited degrees of affinity wish to marry each other, they may apply, in writing, to a judge for permission to do so.

(2) If the judge is satisfied that the circumstances of the particular case are so exceptional as to justify the granting of the permission sought, he may, by order, permit the applicants to marry one another.

The above refers to consanguinity and affinity. Consanguinity relates to blood relationships, whether of full/whole blood or half blood. For instance, for a man, a consanguineous woman would be an ancestress; descendant; sister; father’s sister; mother’s sister; brother’s daughter; and sister’s daughter. The same applies in the reverse between a woman and a consanguineous woman. A marriage between persons of this relationship would be void. It cannot take place, whether the parties consent or not.

However, in cases of affinity, the marriage is not void but voidable. A case must be made to the court for permission to marry in those circumstances. For a man, those related by affinity are as follows: wife’s mother; wife’s grandmother; wife’s daughter; wife’s son’s daughter; wife’s daughter’s daughter; father’s wife; grandfather’s wife; son’s wife and daughter’s son’s wife. You will find in the list of relationships of affinity that some cultures in Nigeria already accept that persons of those relationships can marry each other and therefore perform sexual activities.
One never knows where love will take them. And the scope of what is acceptable keeps widening. It is interesting to read some of the arguments in support of incest between consenting adults. What are your thoughts? Should we prohibit the coming together of consanguineous persons or should we allow adult, consenting consanguineous persons to do as they please?

              
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