(pictured). In April 2020,
Lena Dunham moved from London to
Silver Lake, Los Angeles, in the midst of the
COVID-19 pandemic. She passed the time watching a number of films from the 1960s and 1970s, including
Belle de Jour,
A Woman Under the Influence,
Remember My Name, and
An Unmarried Woman. The films, as well as the impact of a
hysterectomy, motivated Dunham to write, direct, and star in
Sharp Stick. She described the film's impact on her by saying, "It was about processing my life. And then, obviously, it becomes about the characters — and not about you at all." Dunham has likened
Sharp Stick to a "sexual
fable", and many critics have made similar comparisons to fables or
fairy tales. After receiving the script,
Jon Bernthal and
Jennifer Jason Leigh were immediately on board to star.
Taylour Paige, however, was initially hesitant with joining the cast: "If I'm being honest. I was like, 'Don't you think this character was written as a white person?" Dunham convinced Paige to star by telling her that she had written the part with her in mind. With an all-female production crew, filming took place in secret in
Atwater Village and
Eagle Rock, Los Angeles, in early 2021. According to lead actress
Kristine Froseth, "There was a good energy all around. We had an amazing intimacy coordinator. Everything was choreographed—no surprises." In March 2021, the film was presented to buyers at the
71st Berlin International Film Festival. In August 2021,
Tommy Dorfman was confirmed to star. Dunham's husband
Luis Felber composed the musical score. In a
Variety article covering the situation, Gravino claimed that, during the film's development process, Kristine Froseth had blindly approached her business manager after coming across a
TED Talk Gravino gave in 2016. According to Gravino, Froseth had come to the conclusion that, though the script never directly indicated as such, Sarah Jo, her character in the film, showed several characteristics that suggested she was autistic. Gravino, who was grateful to accept a paying job as a consultant, reviewed the script and concurred with Froseth's analysis. Gravino also claimed in the
Variety piece that Lena Dunham had done research on her work and was excited to meet with her. However, according to the film's producers, Dunham rejected Froseth's suggestion to hire Gravino as a consultant, and clarified to Froseth that she had never intended to depict Sarah Jo as autistic. In the same article, an unnamed spokesperson for the film responded to the claims with a formal statement, which read in part, "Sarah Jo was never written nor imagined as a
neurodivergent woman. Nothing about Sarah Jo was
coded to suggest or convey neurodivergence." However, Gravino countered this response by stating, "You can't just say the character isn't going to be neurodiverse; the coding is still there and it comes across that way in the writing and acting choices, even though it's not explicitly stated." She also criticized the "infantilization" of Sarah Jo in the film, though the film's producers claimed that her childlike characterization was developed to reflect the trauma she endured, rather than to indicate that she was autistic. ==Release==