“Women should not provoke men and should be calmer and wiser.” Typhoon Jacqueline Bisset control Turin Film Festival 2025. She’s never spoken about it publicly, but one of Hollywood’s sexy icons of the sixties/seventies, who captured the attention of many audiences by even showing herself in a wet T-shirt in Abyss in 1977, doesn’t exactly sit well with her modern-day #MeToo counterparts. “I’ve always had a very ambivalent attitude towards it #Me, too because I think so women have a responsibility not to be provocative in any way.”
The journey of Jacqueline, who literally galloped under the Mole, lithe and graceful as a little girl (“talk about beauty? it’s indecent to talk about divine grace”), not even a single wrinkle on her face that was never repaired (“plastic surgery is a weakness”), is one to mark on the calendar. “Don’t quote me in a vulgar way, misinterpreted my words, but I believe that accepting the state of nature is fundamental: pFor a man, an erection is something that happens frequently, but that doesn’t mean that a woman has to constantly provoke this action nature that happens to humans, must not be the cause that causes it.”
A sip of invisible natural water and continued: “If a dog pees on your carpet, you won’t get rid of the dogbut dogs are taught to do it outside the house. I don’t want to compare humans to dogs, but there is some common ground. The human instinct in shedding seeds is to ensure the survival of humanity. I’m not arguing this, but I am arguing the fact women need to be calmer and wiser. Why Unfortunately, men often behave like the dogs I described. Of course, I really like men to be enthusiastic about sex and I hate that women are subjected to harassment and violence; However, I believe that everyone must bear their own responsibilities.”
Bisset, full of seductresses and more or less famous girlfriends, never married and never had children. More than 80 films in his career, starting with Dead end From Polanski and passed through the ogre’s clutches Depardieu in 2014 in Welcome to New Yorkspecifically about rapists like Domenique Strauss-Kahn. “I knowno one is safe in Hollywood, I have experienced complex and difficult situations, however I have never experienced violence. A woman’s behavior in her life determines the course of her entire existence. I still feel horrified by the violence and abuse that occurs, but nowadays there is a kind of desire for all-out exhibitionism that is compounded by narcissism and reinforced by social media where many women expose themselves and provoke uncontrollable personal instincts”.
Bisset explains that the cause of this attitude is the lack of adequate maternal education: “Today I see many hopeless young people, without talent, with pathological narcissism. In their fantasies they are stars, but domestic fantasies are shown 360 degrees and are frankly scary. I don’t have a social profile, but I have also been narcissistic in the past. However, I believe that it is not a fundamental element for an actor. Being an actress means studying human behavior different from oneself by trying to interpret it. it is about starting with a continuous ego journey.” Bisset is in Turin to attend The man with seven snares, the film he starred in with Paul Newman in 1972.
