Kerry Katona was left cringing and gasping as she finally sat down to watch the popular eyebrow-raising movie, Saltburn.
The former Atomic Kitten star, 43, followed the trend of people filming themselves reacting to those shocking scenes by taking to her Instagram Stories on Thursday. There were a few scenes in the Emerald Fennell movie that left viewers gagging, such as the uncomfortable moment with the bathtub and the jaw-dropping scenes at the graveyard.
Saltburn stars Euphoria's Jacob Elordi, The Banshees of Inisherin's Barry Keoghan, Rosamund Pike and Richard E. Grant. It was a huge hit with fans, who have been taking to social media to share their thoughts on the outrageous film. And now, Kerry finally got around to watching the movie and was lost for words at the insane scenes that unfolded.
On her Instagram Stories, she was heard repeating the word 'no' as she switched between covering her eyes and mouth with her hands. "What the actual... No, no, no, oh my god," she said at one point.
After finishing the movie, Kerry returned to her page to tell fans about how 'great' it was: "Oh my god, what a mad, mad film that was. That was so good! There are times you can't even watch but you can't take your eyes off it. What a great film, you've got to watch it."
Celeb psychic to Kerry Katona discovered she could see spirits after nan's deathBarry recently discussed taking on his first proper lead role. The ending saw Barry dance naked through the Saltburn estate and he revealed he filmed the scene 11 times to get the perfect take. He explained: “I wanted to get it right. I was trying to perfect it because I wanted it to look gorgeous with this naked figure roaming about all those rooms with their grand paintings and drapery. It’s also a thing of him feeling his power that this is his now.”
Barry has already been Golden Globe-nominated for his role in the film and is tipped to be Oscar-nominated again for his work on screen. Barry has explained that explicit scenes in the film didn’t worry him - as he was more concerned with dancing on screen rather than stripping off on camera.
He told Vanity Fair: "Without sounding cocky, it wasn't the nudity. That was fine for me. It was the dancing. I don't really dance, I don't know how to move my hips certain ways and your body has to go in certain directions and stuff like that," he added. "The dancing scared me. So once I was comfy with the dance, the rest was easy.
“But it could have been 40 and I wouldn’t have cared… When you do something like that you want it to be to the point because it can go either way. So we didn’t stop until we got it, to the point where I put my left foot forward rather than my right [because we wanted it to be perfection."