

What I like about it, it has a really different feeling from other orgy scenes in anything else that we've seen. I think all of our ideas about sexuality, we were able to express them. Everyone belongs to everyone else, so there's no divisions between genders or sexes in the way that we would organize them. What we would call gay relationships would to them not be seen at all. We tried to have a lot more diversity in there. The big orgy sequence didn't happen in Brave New World just because releasing on a streaming service meant that Grant Morrison and the production team could take the show to some risqué places, but rather because intimacy means something very different in New London than viewers may have been expecting and it set the stage.īut no, apart from that, we weren't really given a hard time. You see huge masses of people all starting to move as one organism, because they're all so closely tied together. And that was what we were trying to get across, and I think that worked quite well. But at the same time there's no real soul or passion in it, so when you see these things, they're almost like sporting events or like ballets in a certain way. There's no guilt, there's no sense of shame about it. And so we kind of wanted to show a little bit of that. It has a different meaning from what it has in our culture. For the new world, sex is kind of a duty.
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No! Obviously because the book deals with sex and sexuality so much, but it's a weird kind of package.


When asked if there was anything he wanted to do with Brave New World on Peacock but was unable to, Morrison shared: Brave New World executive producer Grant Morrison spoke with CinemaBlend about the show, and he broke down why the orgy was key to the plot.
