
Nicole Kidman Is Not A Sex Object But If She Were She’d Be A Naked Plastic Doll
IN this age of celebrity, actress Nicole Kidman, a goodwill ambassador for the UN Development Fund for Women, is testifying before a House Foreign Affairs subcommittee. The politicos want to speak with Kidman about legislation to deal with violence against women overseas.
Kidman, who has made career playing cold women, and who won as Oscar for wearing a rubber nose in The Hours, is all ears, and very, very, very smooth skin.
Republican Rep. Dana Rohrabacher sits upright in his chair, holds out his autograph pad and asks the screen siren if the film industry has “played a bad role” in portraying images of women as sex objects. Kidman says “probably“.
But it’s not her. It’s them:
“I can’t be responsible for all of Hollywood, but I can certainly be responsible for my own career.”
If you missed Nicole Kidman naked in The Blue Room, you can catch her flesh in Eyes Wide Shut, (Manhattan porn gothic), Dead Clam, in which a “mass-murderer kidnaps and seduces a young woman (Kidman) after leaving her husband to die on the vessel whose crew he’s just slaughtered” and To Die For, in which she plays an “erotic ice cream sundae in her pastel suits, teddies and fuck-me pumps”.
The sexless and non-objectifying poster you can see here. Have no fear battered women of the world, Nicole Kidman is smiling on you, and maybe frowning, allegedly…
Here are a few pictures of Kidman making a stand for wimmin:
Posted: 22nd, October 2009 | In: Celebrities Comments (2) | Follow the Comments on our RSS feed: RSS 2.0 | TrackBack | Permalink
Comments





October 22nd, 2009 at 10:19 pm
And how is Nicole being attractive and sexy in her movies negating her stand against violence against women?? You show a few photos of Nicole looking sexy and you think you’ve made some sort of point. Well, you have but not the one you think. Your attitude is exactly the problem, that if women are at all sensual or sexy, they can’t complain about being abused (or are they ‘asking’ for abuse do you think?) It’s pretty abhorent that you perpetuate this attitude, and attack women who speak out against violence by bringing up their looks and/or sexuality.
Making comments about Nicole’s looks first and foremost rather than the issue being raised is so ridiculously sexist. She’s played a wide range of characters, but you say she’s made a living playing “cold” women. Another misogyinist stereotype. If a male actor was testifying, would you bring up nude scenes he’s done in movies? Would you comment on his looks? Would that hurt his support of human rights? No, a man can be sexual and attractive and still be considered a human being with rights.
October 22nd, 2009 at 2:40 pm
I liked her with the big nose. I’ve not seen Dead Clam, was that a sequel to ‘Mussel Beach Party’?