The titular festivities of Nude Tuesday don’t arrive until its last 20 minutes. By then, the bouillabaisse of bodies – lumpy, fleshy, knobbly – comes as no surprise after all we have witnessed: an orgy of new-age mysticism and unbridled pleasure. And a literal orgy.
This rip-snorting comedy from the New Zealand director Armagan Ballantyne situates itself on Zǿbftąņ, a fictional island hovering in the wild blue yonder of the Pacific. Ballantyne wastes no time hurtling us into the stultifying marriage of Bruno (Damon Herriman) and Laura (The Breaker Upperers’ Jackie van Beek, doubling as screenwriter), whose subtle barbs and constant bickering are conducted entirely in … gibberish.
The trailer for Nude Tuesday
In the pantheon of invented languages, there have been many studied, intricate beauty: Elvish, Klingon, Na’vi. Nude Tuesday’s speech is not one of them. It is lewd and crude, landing somewhere between a bad ABBA impression and backpackers at Oktoberfest. It’s as though an alien learned Swedish entirely through Ikea’s most misjudged product names – and it is utterly delightful.
In tongue-twisting fricatives and nasal grunts, Herriman and Van Beek perfectly communicate the existential dread of middle-class life. Bruno is a bumbling dad who can’t get the simplest of tasks right, all his sublimated stress suddenly coming to the fore in a screaming match with a poor bloke at the grocery store. Laura is a cog in the corporate machine that smashes her car’s window in a mad dash to retrieve her forgotten notes for a pitch, then delivers her presentation with a gruesome, bloodied arm.
It is Laura and Bruno’s anniversary, and they strap in for a joyless dinner with the in-laws, made all the more awkward by the surprise present to the unhappy couple: an all-inclusive retreat for two, deep in the wilderness that promises long-lasting self-fulfillment – both metaphysical and just plain physical.
The dispirited duo is bundled off faster than they can say marriage counseling to their sanctum in the woods: Wonderla (or ẄØnÐĘULÄ, as it’s stylized).
Nude Tuesday was shot in New Zealand, and it shows: Wonderla is a pastoral fantasy of log cabins and verdant fields, snow-capped mountaintops, and rushing rivers. Except this isn’t so much a ski resort as a culty commune where evil reigns. Wonderla’s residents are mostly yogi types, dreadlocked, shawls, and polyamorous in the same way student colleges are, which is to say: mostly just horny.
The power of the hog … Jemaine Clement as Bjorg. Photograph: Sydney film festival
So Bruno and Laura – stuffy and stiff – come to experience the ways of their free-wheeling, free-balling peers – satisfied and stuffed. By the time they settle into the tantric rhythms of their orgiastic oasis, we can see how this film might end: with the once-sheltered couple stripping away traumas and undergarments to reveal something feral innate within themselves to excavate the identities they’ve lost to the churn of domesticity.
It’s a feat, then, that Herriman and Van Beek – alongside a sideshow of oddballs, including the Australian TikTok star Ian Zaro as a blustering but big-hearted foil to Bruno, and Flight of the Conchords’ Jemaine Clement as their fraudulent cult leader-cum-love guru called (of course) Bjorg – keep the foregone conclusion at bay, just long enough to indulge in a raft of slapstick antics. They cup each other’s crotches as ga rounding exercises. There is breathwork that sounds like climaxing and climaxing that sounds like breathwork. They flail about like apes, held by the gentle embrace of nature, returning to their simple forms – swinging appendages and all. Call it the power of the hog.
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There are certainly notes of The Breaker Upperers – the 2018 comedy Van Beek wrote, directed, and starred in – in Nude Tuesday; both have a certain emotional agility, with the latter ping-ponging between slapstick farce and devastating catharsis without letting any moment percolate too long, lest it descends into schmaltz. And there are whiffs of Lorde’s Solar Power, The White Lotus, and the folk horror Midsommar here, too, infused into the film’s broad satire of the wellness industry.
But Nude Tuesday also wields a silent weapon: its subtitles, written completely independently in post-production by the British comedian Julia Davis. The cast’s performances may transcend language, but the subtitles inject an omniscient – and hilarious – presence in the work, full of gleeful schadenfreude at its characters’ shortcomings (and shortcomings). Davis’s writing lets the film get away with its feast of anatomical jokes, which would quickly wear out were they delivered in English. And when, at last, the din quiets, and we see the anatomy in all its bare-faced glory, we might feel tempted to join this clan of naturists and throw all caution and clothing to the wind. Might.
Nude Tuesday is now screening as part of the Sydney film festival. It will be released in cinemas in New Zealand on 16 June and Australia on 23 June, then streamable on Stan from 7 July. UK and US releases have yet to be announced.