Michael Fassbender plays a fit, handsome guy who has a way with women, a well-paying job and a Manhattan apartment with a glorious view. He is also a sex addict – someone who is compelled to think about sex and to have sex constantly. His life is filled with masturbation, Internet porn, magazine porn, live sex chats, hookers and the odd quickie. At home, at the office and out on the town. He doesn’t seem to enjoy any of it.
For the rest of us, sex is the expression of passion and/or the satisfaction of lust. For this guy, it is just something that he is driven to do, like some people chain smoke. When he tells a woman that his longest relationship was four months long, you just know that it was really four days. It’s very telling that the one time he can have sex resulting from a normal attraction, his plumbing fails him.
His sister, played by Carey Mulligan, moves in uninvited. She is an emotional basket case, with a history of self-cutting, suicide attempts, hospitalizations and a trail of too easy sex and loser boyfriends. For some reason not made explicit, this brother and sister are quite damaged.
Shame is a remarkable portrait of a sick, sick guy, and is centered on a brave and able performance by Fassbender. Still this portrait is only a snapshot. We are left wondering how he got this way and how will he navigate the rest of his life?
2 thoughts on “Shame: sex all the time without any fun”