Sleeping Beauty | |
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Directed by | Julia Leigh |
Screenplay by | Julia Leigh |
Produced by | Jessica Brentnall |
Starring | |
Cinematography | Geoffrey Simpson |
Edited by | Nick Meyers |
Music by | Ben Frost |
Production companies |
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Distributed by | Paramount Pictures |
Release dates |
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Running time | 102 minutes |
Country | Australia |
Language | English |
Budget | A$3,000,000 |
Box office |
Sleeping Beauty is a 2011 Australian erotic drama film written and directed by Julia Leigh in her directorial debut.[3] The film stars Emily Browning as a young university student.[4] She takes up a part-time high-paying job with a mysterious group that caters to rich men and women who like the company of nude sleeping young women. Lucy is required to sleep alongside paying customers and be absolutely submissive to their erotic desires, fulfilling their fantasies by voluntarily entering into physical unconsciousness.[5]
The film is based on influences that include Leigh's own dream experiences, and the novels The House of the Sleeping Beauties and Memories of My Melancholy Whores by Nobel laureates Yasunari Kawabata and Gabriel García Márquez, respectively.[6][7]
The film premiered in May at the 2011 Cannes Film Festival as the first Competition entry to be screened. It was the first Australian film in competition at Cannes since Moulin Rouge! (2001). Sleeping Beauty was released in Australia on 23 June 2011. It received a limited release in the United States on 2 December 2011. Overall, critical reception of the film has been mixed, rising to some approval through June 2016, after circulation of the film on the festival circuit.[8][9]
saf
was invoked but never defined (see the help page).The Australian novelist-turned-director Julia Leigh traces the origins of her first feature, "Sleeping Beauty," to what she calls a bout of 'self-exposure.' The attention she received for her well-received first novel, 'The Hunter' (1999), led to a recurring nightmare about being watched in her sleep.
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