The Duke Of Burgundy May 2026

Cynthia (Sidse Babett Knudsen) is a stern, imperious lepidopterist. Evelyn (Chiara D’Anna) is her seemingly put-upon housemaid. Each day, Evelyn arrives late, spills coffee, or fails to polish a boot correctly, earning a humiliating punishment from her mistress. Each night, after the "work" is done, they collapse into bed together, whispering tenderly.

But for those willing to surrender to its humid, moth-dusted atmosphere, it is a profound masterpiece. It is a film about how love is a performance, how devotion requires labor, and how the most intimate act in the world is not sex, but asking your partner to truly understand what you need—even when what you need is to be punished for forgetting to wash the floors. The Duke Of Burgundy

Sidse Babett Knudsen (best known for Borgen ) is a marvel of micro-expression. As Cynthia, she is the reluctant dominatrix. She doesn’t want to punish Evelyn; she wants to read about butterflies. Watching Knudsen switch from stern cruelty to exhausted, loving tenderness in a single glance is a masterclass in acting. Cynthia (Sidse Babett Knudsen) is a stern, imperious

Yes, you read that correctly. For a film entirely about a sadomasochistic relationship, there is almost no nudity. Strickland understands that the waiting and the ritual are the turn-ons, not the act itself. He eroticizes the tension, the power exchange, and the vulnerability of asking your partner to hurt you. Each night, after the "work" is done, they