While that wasn't first and foremost in my mind, you can't get into this without being struck, on one side, by how far we've come, and then the other side, by how little things have changed.
Actually, I loved Chucky. It's one of the strangest movies I've ever seen.
And Kinsey thought that anybody who defined themselves based on their sexual acts was limiting themselves.
I really think the biopic thing so rarely works, because people's lives don't have a dramatic shape that can be satisfying.
One of the people that became a major source was Clarence Tripp who worked with Kinsey.
The real question is the tension between everyone's specific sexuality and the desire to belong, to fit in, to feel like a part of the group.
I knew, as opposed to Gods And Monsters, this had to deal with Kinsey's early experiences in childhood and early marriage as they informed who he was.