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X-rated BDSM film starring Harry Potter actor edited down due to extreme sex scenes and nudity

X-rated BDSM film starring Harry Potter actor edited down due to extreme sex scenes and nudity

Daily Mail​23-05-2025
One of the most critically-acclaimed movies to screen at Cannes this year has been edited down due to its graphic nature.
Pillion, which stars Alexander Skarsgard and Harry Melling, 36, who played Dudley Dursley, is a gay BDSM-themed romance from first-time feature writer-director Harry Lighton.
The movie received an eight-minute standing ovation, but Lighton admits that the version screened at the iconic film festival had been edited down significantly due to its graphic sex scenes.
'It was purely because I didn't want to push the audience into feeling they were being deliberately shocked by an image,' he explained to Variety.
'So for example, there was one close up of a d**k, a hard d**k … like down the barrel of the lens. And after watching the film on that "f**k-off" screen I thought, yeah, cutting it was probably the right decision!'
Skarsgard chimed in, 'There's definitely a raunchier version of this movie … what you've seen is the family friendly version… there's also the Alexander Skarsgard cut.'
Lighton admits that Pillion may need to undergo even more edits to ensure that it can get a US release.
The film explores the BDSM relationship between a gay biker and a parking attendant - with the project earning rapturous applause at the premiere.
A synopsis reads: 'Colin, a timid man, meets Ray, a confident biker gang leader, who initiates him into a submissive relationship, challenging Colin's mundane existence and prompting personal growth through their unconventional dynamic.'
Before the screening, director Lighton said he wanted the film 'to make you laugh, make you think, make you feel and make you horny.'
The film features explicit sex scenes and kinky BDSM costumes but Cannes audiences were still lapping it up.
Melling stars as shy Colin, whose humdrum life in the suburbs is blown apart when he meets Skarsgard's character Ray.
Ray strikes up a sexual relationship with Colin and integrates him into his queer biker milieu, injecting his life with a fresh dose of excitement and mystique.
However Colin eventually starts to feel stifled by the fact that he always has to occupy the submissive role in his dynamic with Ray.
Skarsgard has spoken freely in the past about how comfortable he is playing nude scenes, quipping to uInterview: 'I'm Scandinavian, godda***it! We love to be naked.'
The Swedish hunk is also no stranger to gay sex scenes, thanks to his star-making turn on the vampire show True Blood.
One of the scenes was with heterosexual actor Theo Alexander, whose anxiety Alexander had to help assuage before they shot the sequence.
'He's also a straight guy and he was nervous; he had never kissed a guy before,' Alexander explained in an interview with PrideSource.
He said to Theo, 'Look at the scene. It's this nemesis and he comes in and then it gets seductive and you think they're gonna make love and it gets into that and then suddenly my character stabs him in the back and he explodes.'
The actor added, 'In two minutes, look at this emotional rollercoaster we're taking the audience on. If we commit to this, it's going to be an amazing scene and we're going to be very happy with it forever. If we hold back, that's when it gets awkward.'
Skarsgard is himself heterosexual and is in a long-term relationship with Swedish actress Tuva Novotny, with whom he welcomed a baby in 2022.
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Riverdance creator Michael Flatley teases Irish presidential bid
Riverdance creator Michael Flatley teases Irish presidential bid

The Independent

time28 minutes ago

  • The Independent

Riverdance creator Michael Flatley teases Irish presidential bid

Riverdance creator Michael Flatley has indicated he is open to seeking a nomination for Ireland 's next president. An election for the largely ceremonial role is expected towards the end of October, as it must take place in the 60 days before outgoing President Michael D Higgins 's term ends on 11 November. Flatley, who is eligible to run as an Irish citizen, said he had not made a final decision on the matter but is consulting with a "team of advisers". Speaking to RTE Radio One about newspaper speculation on a potential bid, the Irish-American said he is stopped on the street "everywhere" he goes and asked if he will run. He clarified, however, that the speculation stemmed from his previous appearance on the show with host Brendan O'Connor. The choreographer and dancer said: 'I take it seriously but no, I have not made a decision'. Pressed on the matter, Flatley said: 'I have a huge business to run, I have an army of dancers counting on me to make a living. 'I have a whiskey company, a beautiful young wife and son that I want to spend time with. 'If I thought that I could be of benefit to the Irish people and – maybe more importantly – if I thought I could be a voice of the Irish people' He added: 'Right now, I don't think they have a voice – not a true proper deep voice that you know that speaks their language.' Flatley said he hears the concerns of 'average person on the street' and they are not 'happy right now', adding: 'Somebody has to speak for the Irish people.' He said he was not sure the role needed another politician, adding that he had spent three decades promoting Ireland and Irish culture. He said he had not been approached by any political party, but had been contacted by some 'people in the know'. 'It's certainly not something that I've made any decision on, but it does get frustrating when you see the hardworking Irish taxpayer working as hard out and having no say in things.' Asked if he was leaning more in favour of running, he replied: 'Let it be said that I stand for Ireland and the Irish people.' To be eligible to run, a candidate must be an Irish citizen who is 35 or older. They must be nominated either by at least 20 members of the Oireachtas or at least four local authorities. Former or retiring presidents can nominate themselves. So far, two candidates have secured sufficient backing to enter the race. Mairead McGuinness, who was a TV presenter and farming journalist before becoming an MEP and EU commissioner, is the nominee to become Fine Gael's presidential candidate. Catherine Connolly, Independent TD for Galway West, has received the backing of the Social Democrats and People Before Profit, as well as independent TDs and Senators. Fianna Fail, the party with the most TDs in the Dail, has not clarified if it will run a candidate and is to make a decision in the early autumn. Sinn Fein has also not indicated a final decision on the race.

Moment my father claimed Salt Path author Raynor Win was 'nicking money' - and it added up to £64,000
Moment my father claimed Salt Path author Raynor Win was 'nicking money' - and it added up to £64,000

Daily Mail​

time29 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

Moment my father claimed Salt Path author Raynor Win was 'nicking money' - and it added up to £64,000

The daughter of a man who claimed The Salt Path author Raynor Winn stole thousands of pounds from his business has broken down recalling the moment her late father realised he wouldn't be able to pay his employees after vast sums of his had money disappeared. In a new interview with BBC News Waleshttps:// Debbie Adams, 46, is seen putting her head in her hands and wiping away tears as she recounts how her father, an estate agent and property surveyor who died in 2012, told her Raynor Winn had 'been nicking money'. Adams has been speaking out about the impact Winn, who became an overnight millionaire thanks to the success of her 2018 book - and just-released film starring Gillian Anderson - about tracing the South West Coastal Path, had on her late father Martin Hemmings. She said he was 'absolutely shot' when he realised he wouldn't be able to pay the women who worked for him. An investigation by The Observer earlier this month suggested Winn's story about her life in The Salt Path was misleading. The publication claimed that Raynor and her husband Moth Winn, real names Sally and Tim Walker, lost their money after failing to pay money they had been accused of stealing from Hemmings. In the emotional BBC News interview, Adams told the broadcaster she had been left with a 'feeling of sickness to the pit of your stomach' when her father revealed his hard-earned money was nowhere to be seen. She explained: 'I had a phone call from Dad saying that he was worried about the business. He told her: 'I just don't know what's gone wrong, I'm working every hour God gives me and there's no money.' Adams, who was 29 at the time and about to get married, continued: 'About five days after that first call he rings up and goes, she [Winn] has been nicking money. 'I was like, "Dad, come on now, no. Surely there's something gone wrong?" He said "no, we've had a look and there's money missing"'. The couple had become friends with the husband of Winn, Moth Winn, otherwise known as Tim Walker, when the pair worked together in the 1990s. In 2001, Moth mentioned his wife had lost her job as a bookkeeper at a hotel and Martin Hemmings' wife Ros suggested to her husband they hire Raynor for their business. However, a year later the couple noticed that they were no longer 'making any money'. Hemming initially believed that between £6,000 and £9,000 had been taken and decided to contact both the police and a solicitor about the sums. Adams says that when The Salt Path author realised an investigation might happen, she turned up 'crying' at the family home with a cheque for £9,000, claiming it was 'all the money I have' and saying she'd had to sell family possessions to raise it. After accepting the cheque on police advice, Hemmings went back through his accounts more thoroughly and to his horror estimated his business was actually £64,000 down. BBC News also interviewed Hemming's wife Ros, who said she was speaking out to give a voice to her late husband. She revealed the couple recieved a letter from a solicitor in London offering to pay back the money and legal fees totalling around £90,000. The offer included an agreement not to press criminal charges against Raynor Winn. Mrs Hemmings said her husband signed the agreement, not wanting to put a mother through a criminal trial. Mrs Hemmings said: 'The mistake was that we ever employed her, and the biggest mistake my husband made, because obviously I'd recommended her in a way, was that he trusted her.' 'I did not think there was any reason for this aside from the fact that Martin was rubbish at sending out bills.' She added: 'I can't forgive her for sort of destroying my husband's confidence in people, because it did. The Hemmings claim they agreed not to press charges against Raynor Winn, after agreeing she would pay back the money. The new film adaptation of Winn's book follows the story of a couple who lose their home and later discover the husband has been diagnosed with a terminal illness as they embark on a year long coastal trek In a statement following The Observer investigation, Raynor Winn said: 'The dispute with Martin Hemmings, referred to in the Observer by his wife, is not the court case in The Salt Path. 'Nor did it result in us losing our home. Mr Hemmings is not Cooper. Mrs Hemmings is not in the book, nor is she a relative of someone who is. 'I worked for Martin Hemmings in the years before the economic crash of 2008. For me it was a pressured time. 'It was also a time when mistakes were being made in the business. Any mistakes I made during the years in that office, I deeply regret, and I am truly sorry.' Mrs Hemmings said she had not read The Salt Path, which sold more than two million copies, because she felt it would not reflect her view on why the couple embarked on their walk. Speaking to the MailOnline from her remote Welsh cottage last week, Debbie Adams said: 'He felt he was ripped off by her, which he was. 'My mum is still angry and frustrated by it as my dad was upset about it. He felt really let down by it all. 'But I don't feel angry any more as I have parked it. But I'm not sure my mum has.' A close friend of her mother Ros Hemmings told MailOnline that she and her late husband were 'saddened and very frustrated' that Winn had escaped any punishment for her alleged theft. On the other hand, at least they got the money back, said the friend. 'If things had gone differently, and Walker had not been able to come up with the money then she may have been prosecuted, probably would not have gone to jail and ended up doing community service. 'Then she'd have been repaying their money at some paltry rate such as £5 a week for the rest of her life. 'So although it wasn't a perfect solution, it was probably better than the alternative.' Following The Observer investigation, angry readers began demanding refunds for The Salt Path after Winn was accused of lying about the 'true story'. The writer has been accused of omitting key elements of her story in her account of losing her home before embarking on a mammoth trek of the 630-mile South West Coast Path. More than two million people have read her popular 2018 memoir but the author is now facing claims the story may not be as 'unflinchingly honest' as initially billed. Readers are now flooding the Amazon book page with one-star reviews, saying they are returning their books for refunds following a newspaper's investigation. One said they felt 'completely conned' and 'seriously disappointed'. Another wrote: 'I want a refund of this and the two sequels... I don't want to read them anymore.' And a third said: 'After reading the investigation in The Observer newspaper and learning the truth I am glad I was able to return it for a refund.' Following an investigation into their backgrounds, the publication said that The Salt Path's protagonists, Winn and her husband, Moth, previously went by their less flamboyant legal names, Sally and Tim Walker. And rather than being forced out of their home in rural Wales when an investment in a childhood friend's business went awry, as the book suggested, it is alleged that the property was repossessed after Winn stole tens of thousands of pounds from a former employer and was arrested. Questions have also been raised about Moth's debilitating illness, corticobasal degeneration [CBD], a rare neurological condition in the same family as Parkinson's disease, which is central to the book. Life expectancy after diagnosis is around six to eight years, according to the NHS – however Moth has been living with the condition for 18 years with no apparent visible symptoms. As part of The Observer's investigation, a number of neurologists specialising in CBD were contacted, with one telling the newspaper that his history with the illness 'does not pass the sniff test'. Released in 2018, The Salt Path details the Winns' decision to embark on the South West Coast Path when they lose their home after investing a 'substantial sum' into a friend's business which ultimately failed. In the book, Winn writes: 'We lost. Lost the case. Lost the house.' The memoir then describes their subsequent 630-mile walk to salvation, wild camping en route and living on around £40 per week, and is described as a 'life-affirming true story of coming to terms with grief and the healing power of the natural world'. It prompted two sequels and the film adaptation, which was released in May, starring Gillian Anderson and Jason Isaacs, who was recently in HBO's The White Lotus. The Winns posed for photographs alongside the actors on the red carpet in London at the film's premiere.

Making Trump see red, starring in a film with Brad Pitt, candid chats with Liam Payne and nose job tips from a Love Islander... I'm a showbiz journalist and these are my wildest celeb encounters by CIARA FARMER
Making Trump see red, starring in a film with Brad Pitt, candid chats with Liam Payne and nose job tips from a Love Islander... I'm a showbiz journalist and these are my wildest celeb encounters by CIARA FARMER

Daily Mail​

timean hour ago

  • Daily Mail​

Making Trump see red, starring in a film with Brad Pitt, candid chats with Liam Payne and nose job tips from a Love Islander... I'm a showbiz journalist and these are my wildest celeb encounters by CIARA FARMER

For as long as I can remember, I have loved all things celebrity - fascinated with the lives of everyone from the dizzying heights of the A-list to the bottom of the Z-list. So nabbing a job as a showbiz journalist meant I could make my passion a career, with writing stories and attending events going hand-in-hand with meeting stars. Many celebrities are well-media trained, giving cursory interview answers or well-rehearsed PR scripts - yet some are far more interesting. Over the past 13 years, I have experienced both brilliant and bizarre experiences, including an interview with Robert de Niro leading to a sassy scolding from the White House and the late Liam Payne defying his team and baring his soul. Further experiences include meeting my hero Coleen Rooney just one week after her now-legendary Wagatha Christie victory, while my post-dinner chat with Love Islander Megan Barton-Hanson turned into a medical advisory. Add 'starring' opposite Brad Pitt in a Guy Richie film and This Morning star Josie Gibson sleeping on the floor at my parents' house - my celebrity experiences have truly been quite the wild ride. Interviewing Robert De Niro in 2018 to celebrate the launch of his new Nobu Hotel in Marbella, I managed to ruffle some feathers in Washington. After choosing to swerve politics or news reporting to pursue my life-long passion for showbusiness, I naturally never thought my work would fall upon the White House 's press desk. However, after interviewing Robert De Niro in 2018 to celebrate the launch of his new Nobu Hotel in Marbella, which he co-owns with sushi chef extraordinaire Nobu Matsuhisa, I managed to ruffle some feathers in Washington. When asked who his dream dinner guest would be, Robert insisted he would never let Trump into any of his Nobu restaurants. Making his famously passionate feelings about the president clear, Robert told me: 'I don't care what he likes. If he walked into a restaurant I was in - I'd walk out.' After publishing the article, I was naturally left aghast when a notification pinged on my phone to tell me the White House's deputy press secretary Hogan Gidley had spoken out against my lighthearted chat with the Oscar winner. Speaking to Fox Business Network at the time, Hogan responded to my chat: 'I don't think the president is planning on attending a dinner at Nobu anytime soon. 'Look, Hollywood people grandstand all the time. He's not stopping at Nobu anytime soon'. It looks like any delusional chances of a fun-filled interview with the most powerful man in the world were well and truly quelled. While my showbiz career started 13 years ago, my first brush with the A-list came a whopping 26 years ago when I met Brad Pitt and Jennifer Aniston. Aged nine, I was cast as an extra in Guy Ritchie's 2000 gangster movie Snatch, playing one of the gypsy children on Brad's character Mickey O'Neil's caravan site. After achieving the glowing accolade of half my earnest face appearing for mere seconds in a scene with Hollywood heavyweights Jason Statham and Stephen Graham, I was met with the very top of the A-list on the muddy film set. An impossibly stunning Jennifer Aniston emerged from a people carrier to visit her then-husband at work and upon seeing my bewildered eyes she offered to take a picture using one of the make-up artist's Polaroids. Puffing on a cigarette while in his costume, Brad failed to smile for the picture with an extremely excited schoolgirl, yet Jennifer beamed with her hand around my shoulder. Understandably not happy to be interrupted in his work day, Brad proffered a few grunts, yet chatty Jennifer was sweetness and light - acting as a definitive factor in my future feelings about Team Jen or Team Brangelina. Having copied her Juicy Couture tracksuits aged 14 to devouring her column inches, it's safe to say I am a long-time Coleen Rooney fan. So when I saw the star across the bar at Wembley Stadium in 2022, while waiting to see our shared favourite band Westlife, I could not resist an introduction. The thrill of the meet was due to it coming just one week after her triumph in the Wagatha Christie lawsuit, which saw her in a now-legendary battle with Rebekah Vardy about the latter leaking stories to the press about the former's life. After Coleen released an explosive statement in 2019, Rebekah commenced action in the English High Court to sue Coleen for defamation in 2020. A long-drawn out court case was carried out which saw Coleen reign victorious on 29 July 2022 - one week before Westlife's concert. Pledging my allegiance, I headed to the bar to congratulate her on the victory and admit that I was always Team Coleen since Wagatha Christie came to be. Proving herself to be the definition of grace, while I did not get the juicy details I would have loved, the WAG gave a sweet thank you and a coy smile. Meeting tragic Liam Payne was a standout celebrity experience thanks to his incredible candour and clear love for his son and then-girlfriend Cheryl - which he was desperate to discuss despite strict instructions from his team. In 2017, while promoting VOXI Mobile, I was invited to interview Liam with fellow journalists. As with many interviews, his team brandished a list of banned topics - mainly regarding his private life. At the time Liam was dating Cheryl, who had given birth to their son Bear just five months previously and who was known to be tight-lipped about her private life. Despite this, the late star could not contain his excitement while answering my questions and wound up giving a sweet insight into his private life - all while his stunned team and fellow journalists looked on. Liam, who passed away last year following a fall from a hotel balcony, disregarded instructions and spoke joyously about life with Cheryl and Bear, now seven. In the sweet chat, he dubbed the former Girls Aloud singer a 'superwoman' - before admitting she jokingly 'tells him off' for revealing too much about family life. Liam admitted that he will go home after an interview and be chastised by Cheryl for opening up too much. 'I do get a bit overexcited sometimes. I'll go home and she'll say "What did you say that for?"' he confessed. 'But I'm just really happy with everything and life's great, I'm really enjoying myself and everything's really good so I can't really complain. I just like to talk about it!' While many celebrities are evasive about their plastic surgery, I was met with new levels of honesty when interviewing Love Island delight Megan Barton-Hanson. After attending a dinner with the beauty and her then-boyfriend Wes Nelson just months after their departure from the villa in 2018, I chatted to the OnlyFans icon about her widely-discussed plastic surgery and image overhaul. Anticipating a cagey response, a dismissal or even a barb, I was stunned to be met with quite the opposite. I confided in Megan that I was just two months away from having my own nose job and what was intended to be a reality TV chat turned into a medical advisory. Megan spoke me through the best and worst parts of the procedure - informing me that the aftermath was the hardest, saying: 'They put these two tampon type things up your nose and the worst bit is when they pull them out'. The delightfully warm star then joined me in taking a profile 'Before' shot to show my pre-surgery nose, while we parted with the promise of taking an 'After' image when we crossed paths after my surgery. While I'm yet to see Megan again to capture our 'After' picture, she remains one of my favourite stars to have met - and she was indeed correct about the aforementioned 'tampons' during rhinoplasty recovery. The delightfully warm star then joined me in taking a profile 'Before' shot to show my pre-surgery nose, while we parted with the promise of taking an 'After' image when we crossed paths after my surgery Having a This Morning star and Big Brother winner sleep on the floor of my bedroom in my mum and dad's house was not on my career bingo card. Josie Gibson is undoubtedly the loveliest star I have ever met and following a meet at Celtic Manor in Wales we formed a friendship. After attending a press event together months later, we decided to keep drinking into the wee hours at various London hot spots. Given the fact she lives in Bristol, as the night came to a close I offered up a night at my parents' house, where I then lived. Thus came the story of my brother walking into my room in the morning to be greeted with the sight of Josie under a pile of duvets on the floor. Proving further no meet-up with Josie is a quiet affair, I later attended her baby shower in 2018 at Piccolino Heddon Street in London. After I hit the dance floor with the star and a host of other TV personalities, she later discovered she had induced labour - making for an extremely unprescendented encounter with a star. In the wake of these strange happenings and with plans for many more years in showbiz, I hope my celebrity encounters will continue in all their bizarre ways. (However, I am holding off on plans to infuriate any more world leaders.)

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