When Jennifer Lawrence said, “It’s Just A Bizarre Experience,” she was expressing her discomfort during the filming of an intimate scene with Chris Pratt

Morten Tyldum directed the film Passengers, which stars Chris Pratt and Jennifer Lawrence in the key parts.Jennifer Lawrence was anxious for her first “real” s*x scene on the Passengers shoot. Even though everyone on set was professional, the Oscar-winning actress admitted in an open interview that she felt uncomfortable and awkward during their personal sequences with Chris Pratt. “It’s just a bizarre experience,” she recalled.

Given her reputation for candor, Jennifer Lawrence didn’t hesitate to share her personal struggles. Jennifer Lawrence claimed in an interview with The Hollywood Reporter that she drank to make herself feel better because she was so uncomfortable. “You sip alcohol. You become really, extremely inebriated,” she added, but the drinking also her furious. Her co-star at the time, Pratt, was married, which only made her inner turmoil worse. She said, “I knew it was my job, but I couldn’t tell my stomach that.”

Two passengers in a spaceship traveling to a distant planet, Jim (Chris Pratt) and Aurora (Jennifer Lawrence), wake up ninety years too early. This is these visitors’ story. The film tackles some difficult moral issues as they navigate their budding friendship and their loneliness in space. However, despite having a clever concept, Passengers received backlash for having unnecessary 𝑠e𝑥ual scenes. Many felt that this detracted from the more contemplative plot of the movie.Lawrence’s disclosure highlights a more serious issue that affects more than just movies. Nowadays, a lot of young women turn to alcohol as a crutch during 𝑠e𝑥ual encounters. The real-world culture of hookups reflects this.

It’s quite concerning that you require liquid courage to let go of your inhibitions in 𝑠e𝑥ual circumstances. Whether they are on set or in real life, women shouldn’t have to fight their emotions. Alcohol or other external influences should not influence 𝑠e𝑥ual consent, which should be simple to grasp.

Lawrence’s experience on Passengers demonstrates how difficult it is to distinguish between fact and fiction. The psychological harm these scenes can inflict is real, despite the fact that performers are paid to act out invented scenarios. There are others who are beginning to doubt the notion that actors—women in particular—must endure agony in order to play their roles.

As more actresses come forward, though—Dakota Johnson, for example, described her s*x sequences in Fifty Shades of Grey “emotionally taxing”—it becomes evident that what happens on screen can have a lasting impact off screen. Businesses and the general public alike must realize that there can be genuine suffering concealed behind any “perfect” scene.

Lawrence’s remarks ultimately have significance outside of the film industry. Women should always feel empowered to speak up when they don’t feel safe, whether they are in real life or on stage. Since “broken hearts aren’t that simple,” as Lawrence once stated, we need to talk about this right away. The complex questions surrounding 𝑠e𝑥ual consent in images and in person are not that straightforward.