Girls Sex Film 2022

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Girls Sex Film 2022
Girls Girls Girls review – Finnish friends find love, sex and figure skating
Vivid and lovable … Girl Girls Girls
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Three young women in Helsinki explore their sexuality in Alli Haapasalo’s live-wire coming-of-age tale
A ffairs of the heart – as well as the rest of the body – are the subject of this live-wire movie from Finnish director Alli Haapasalo, a triple-portrait of three young women in Helsinki who are looking for love or who find love looking for them. It’s a film that looks at the new possibility of sexuality, including, maybe, asexuality – the new frontier in sexual politics.
Aamu Milonoff (niece of the Finnish actor Eero Milonoff, from Border and The Happiest Day in the Life of Olli Mäki) is Mimmi: yearningly disgruntled with life and certainly with life at school where she gets into a scrap with another girl. Her friend Rönkkö (Eleonoora Kauhanen) works weekends with Mimmi at the smoothie bar at the mall, where a certain sweetly shy guy is hanging around, asking Rönkkö for a date. As for Mimmi herself, she has a coup de foudre at a party when she meets the willowy and charismatic Emma (Linnea Leino), whose own emotional and sexual life up until now has been displaced into figure skating, and who is obsessed with nailing the desperately hard triple Lutz manoeuvre. (This is an elusive experience which Haapasalo’s film wittily places in juxtaposition with other girls’ search for an orgasm – or, indeed, anyone who knows how to give any sexual pleasure at all.)
Girls Girls Girls reminded me of Lukas Moodysson’s films, such as Show Me Love and We Are the Best! , and I liked the way it showed how sex is a kind of experience and expertise that explodes into your consciousness in your teen years as something which is clearly more important than anything else in your life but which you are required to pretend is only one equal part of everything else you’re dealing with: schoolwork, family issues etc. I’m not entirely sure that the break-up-make-up dynamic between Rönkkö and Emma entirely works or is fully motivated and dramatised, but this is such a vivid, lovable triple-decker performance from Milonoff, Kauhanen and Leino.
Girls Girls Girls is released on 30 September in cinemas.
By Samantha Olson Updated: Nov 17, 2022
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Reneé Rapp, Alyah Chanelle Scott, Amrit Kaur, and Pauline Chalamet are heating things up in season 2 of The Sex Lives of College Girls .
The brand-new season of Gen-Z comedy The Sex Lives of College Girls just hit HBO Max , which means we'll get to reunite with our favorite suitemates at Essex College — Bela, Leighton, Whitney, and Kimberly. While the first season of The Sex Lives of College Girls honed in on the first-year experiences of the girls and touched on topics like internalized homophobia, sexual assault, and dating older guys, season two continues to shine a light on serious situations and brings on even more drama.
ICYMI, Kimberly lost her scholarship and is now tackling multiple jobs, Leighton's exploring the single life after her breakup with Alicia, Bela is starting her new comedy mag on campus to compete with The Catullan , and Whitney is figuring out her path after soccer season ends . Not to mention, there's a new face on campus this season when a former Division 1 athlete transfers to Essex from a big party school.
The actresses behind the core four on The Sex Lives of College Girls — Reneé Rapp, Alyah Chanelle Scott, Amrit Kaur, and Pauline Chalamet — caught up with Seventeen to dish all about season two and how their characters have evolved since we last saw them on our screens. They also shared their favorite on-set memories and what working on a show like Sex Lives means to them.
Pauline Chalamet: It's kind of surreal to come back to the same sets. Even though we were in a different stage, it was built the exact same way. From the character's point of view, I was so lucky and grateful to be given the chance to do it again. When you end a show and then you're starting season two, there are nerves around, ‘Okay, well I did this character for a season, and now I have to do this character again. Am I gonna be able to pick up where I left off with her after months have passed?’ I think being able to get back into the environment was a big influence in [starting back up].
Reneé Rapp: I remember just being so excited. Alyah and I pulled onto the lot, it just so happens, at the same time. She was in front of me and I don't think I was even that level of excited before, but there was something about [us] being right there. She literally yelled out of her car and was like, "Hey!" Alyah Chanelle Scott: Mind you, it was like, five in the morning and we were that excited. Everyone was like, "Please shut up." It was amazing. [For the] first season, I felt so much anxiety working on the show because it was the first time I had done something like this. I just didn't know what was happening most of the time — [it was like] they would talk and I would hear a different language. I was like, all I know is when they say action, just say the words. This time around, I know things. We have a little bit more under our belt, we have a little more experience, a little bit more confidence, a little bit less imposter syndrome.
RR: I have become 10 times closer to my personal identity and I have become 10 times more sure of myself — in [terms of my] sexuality, in my identity, in the people who I choose to surround myself with, in what it means to be a good friend, in what it means to have other people be good friends to me. I just feel like I've learned so much about myself.
ACS: What I learned from Whitney is to have grace and patience with myself. We're in constant process — there's never a point where we have all the answers — and that's okay. There's always room for improvement and growth as long as you commit to trying and she tries, so that's cool.
ACS: I hope she sticks with [the hard class] because she's good at [the subject] and that's cool. I hope she finds a balance between all of the things she desires and keeps finding new things she desires and doesn't get married to one trope or thing or idea, because people are complex. I also hope that her relationships work themselves out.
PC: The stakes became super high. So we meet Kimberly in season one, who's quite naive and pretty straight-laced, knows how she wants her life to go, and has planned everything out. She gets a little distracted [since it's] her first time being away from home, there's an upperclassman that's really enticing and kind of takes the lead on everything else and leads to her falling behind in school. She feels like she needs to cheat, she gets caught and it's kind of like the whole structure that was already so fragile kind of crumbles by the end of season one.
When we meet Kimberly in season two, [she's] on a deeper level, on a little bit more of a nuanced level and we see the fun party aspect of college take a little bit of a backseat while she figures out how she's gonna stay in school. We meet her on a field where the stakes are really high for her to be able to continue at the place that she dreams of staying at.
Amrit Kaur: I improvise a lot of lines when they don't necessarily say cut immediately, so a lot of us will just continue talking. I had a line this season that I really wish made the cut, but it didn't [end up making it]. I get hit by a football and [call the person who threw it] "Eminem." What I did to prep for Bela was try my hand at standup [comedy] to understand her trying to make jokes and not always succeeding. So even if they didn't hit "cut," that sort of mechanism in my body was still working because I was practicing that as a rookie, just like Bela is a rookie.
AK: I think we have the advantage of having four different characters, which allows us to look at four different experiences. So if you don't relate to one character, you relate to another. Also, these are just four experiences of millions that go to college and universities that we won't be able to tell through the course of this series, we're lucky and fortunate to be able to tell each one of these.
ACS: It's so exciting to see people resonate with the show, but I also feel such a responsibility. We know we can't cover everything and I want everyone to feel like they have something they can get from the show, but I know that that's not realistic. I feel so grateful to have the chance to be that for people, to be that show.
RR: I think being young is the craziest, coolest, and most stressful sh-t. It feels like hell back and in reality, I [once felt] so unable to zoom out. [Life] shouldn't feel like this, one facade kind of thing. It should feel like a bunch of different layers because being young is stressful and also really liberating. So, it feels very special and very relatable [to work on The Sex Lives of College Girls ] .
PC: I think that being on a comedy show that you know is written by such incredibly talented writers, is something that's just so special. To be able to be a part of making people laugh or bringing some levity to people's lives feels great. It feels great to know that it's a show that people can binge, it's a show that makes people laugh. Like Amrit was saying, our characters are also different to their elements that people can relate to. I like how Mindy and Justin are taking the challenge of exploring subjects and trying to give them some depth and meaning. It feels really special to be able to say those words and bring the stories to life.
Parts of this interview have been edited and condensed for clarity.
Want to know more about The Sex Lives of College Girls, including exclusive cast interviews and behind-the-scenes intel from showrunners? Stay tuned to Seventeen Watch Club for the latest on the series.
Sam is the editorial assistant at Seventeen, covering pop culture, celebrity news, health, and beauty. When she isn't draping her cheeks in blush, you can probably find her live-tweeting awards shows or making SwiftToks.
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By ELLE.com Published: Nov 17, 2022
Reneé Rapp, Alya Chanelle Scott, Pauline Chalamet, and Amrit Kaur in The Sex Lives of College Girls season 2.
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School is back in session at Essex College— The Sex Lives of College Girls has returned for its sophomore season. After premiering on HBO Max in 2021, the beloved new comedy from Mindy Kaling and Justin Noble picks up shortly after the season 1 finale, as our leading quartet of roommates return to campus after fall break.
In the new episodes, the girls face a new set of challenges: Bela (Amrit Kaur) launches her own women-centric comedy magazine, Kimberly (Pauline Chalamet) deals with the aftermath of losing her scholarship, Leighton (Reneé Rapp) explores the dating pool on campus, and Whitney (Alyah Chanelle Scott) tries to define her life outside of soccer when the season ends.
The 10-episode comedy is streaming exclusively on HBO Max. If you don’t already have a subscription, plans start at $9.99 per month or $99.99 per year with ads, and $14.99 per month or $149.99 per year without ads.
The first two episodes of the new season are already out, with two episodes arriving weekly through December 15. The entire first season is also available on the streamer, in case you want to binge it again. (You know you want to.)
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The Sex Lives of College Girls season 2
What we would give to be a student at Essex College!
From the exhilarating naked parties and the god-awful acappella groups to the friendly RAs and the passionate group leaders, we can’t help but want to enroll in the university as soon as possible — if only the university were real.
As you might have guessed, the university featured in The Sex Lives of College Girls isn’t exactly a real institution. But that doesn’t mean the locations you’ve seen thus far are only a figment of your imagination. In fact, we’d argue that co-creators Mindy Kaling and Justin Noble’s commitment to world-building this university makes it that much more legit.
Keep reading to learn of the many real-life locations that make up Essex College.
Despite the show’s declaration, The Sex Lives of College Girls was never filmed in Vermont.
For the first season of the HBO Max show, the cast and crew used sites in Vassar College (located in Poughkeepsie, NY) to get the majority of its outside scenes and used Warner Brothers Studio in California for any remaining scenes.
As for the second season, Seventeen reports that the new season opted to film at the University of California in Los Angeles and the University of Washington instead.
It’s unknown to us why the show underwent a major location change this time around. It may have something to do with the production having an increased budget to film anywhere they would like. Or maybe it’s because the events in the new season will require newer places now that a certain fraternity isn’t allowed to have parties anymore and a controversial comedy club is now shut down. Or, simply enough, the cast and crew just wanted a fresh start for season 2.
No matter the reason, The Sex Lives of College Girls is back and better than ever! A few new faces, tons of new problems, and two new filming locations will certainly make this the best season yet.
Stream The Sex Lives of College Girls season 2 today on HBO Max .
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