Nina Forever is not your typical Valentineâs Day movie. In fact, itâs not your typical movie at all, unless your typical movie is a psychosexual dark comedy about the corpse of an ex-girlfriend who comes back to gory life every time you try having sex with someone else.
Directed by The Blaine Brothers, Nina Forever finally arrives in select theaters this weekend after blowing us away at its SXSW premiere. Itâs the perfect film for some audiences and a troubling phantasmagoria for others, but thereâs nothing quite like it. Abigail Hardingham and Cian Barry play the young, living lovers whose romance is haunted by the shambling corpse of Nina, played by Fiona OâShaughnessy, and the strange storyline forced both actors to consider strange ideas about love, loss and even necrophilia.
We got Barry and Hardingham on the phone to talk about the odd feelings that Nina Forever brings up, and their experiences on the set of such an unusual film. Read the interview below, and whatever you do donât miss their new film.

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Also: Abigail Hardingham and The Blaine Brothers Talk âNina Foreverâ at SXSW 2015 (Exclusive Video)
Crave: Letâs start at the beginning. What were your first conversations about Nina Forever about? Did you talk about the plot or the trauma or the copious amounts of sexâŠ?
Abigail Hardingham: [Laughs.] God, what was the first thing that we spoke aboutâŠ? It was so brilliant that they actually sent the whole script before the first audition, which actually pretty rare. You usually get like a really brief breakdown and about two scenes. So I had the whole story to make my own interpretation of the character and story, and I donât know if I necessarily âgot itâ straight away, but I definitely felt like it was really, really heartfelt, really exciting, and was definitely within, not a particular genre, but it was in the kind of type of film I know I love to watch. I could tell that it was going to be something that, whether or not I was in it, I was going to be really excited to see it. But when I did read it I obviously put myself in the position of Holly, and I just couldnât actually imagine â or didnât want to imagine â anyone else doing it.
But I guess some of the first conversations that we had were just about, I guess, Hollyâs background, why she is the way she is, how she became so⊠why her character is so nurturing. Yeah, I think that itâs always a good starting point to just kind of get to know how your character got to the point that they are at within the story.
Cian Barry: Yeah, when I first went got to the audition, I think it was so refreshing that it was about the characters, the actual characters, what theyâve gone through in their lives, and the loss and dealing with that, and grief and things like that. It was all just character driven in that detail. It was surprising to even be thinking of people talking about genre stuff like that, because our job is thinking about this, trying to make this a real person, and they [The Blaine Brothers] were so, so driven by that the whole time. It was great. Even those first meetings, after I had read the script, to come with these⊠because you empathize and you feel, at times, the loss in your own life and trying to recover from things. To have two people who really care that much, it was amazing.
Even the first audition was amazing, it was them, two cameras are just rolling around you, leaving you free to do it and just be in the place, hopefully trying to find wherever the character is and stuff. It was great from an actorâs point of view. Youâre given an opportunity like that, you just grab it and try to punch everybody else away who tries to grab it as well.
Abigail Hardingham: Itâs such an actorâs film. For me, it is such a golden opportunity for an actor. It was definitely all about the growth and development of these three central characters, so as an actor it was extremely exciting. Like, kind of narcissistically, god yeah, thereâs so much to this character! [Laughs.]
Abigail, you mentioned that when you first read the script it wasnât entirely apparent what was going on within its pages. What unlocked it for you, and did the film end up becoming about for you?
Abigail Hardingham: Well, it was Ben and Chris that unlocked it for me really. Because thereâs only so much you can do for yourself when youâre just reading it for the first or second time. So it was their openness and their honesty about where itâs come from, itâs come from their heart. Thatâs what really made me understand the story a lot more, and the bigger picture of it. Rather than just Hollyâs story, it has such a bigger scope and meaning to it. Yeah, it was Ben and Chris who ushered me in, to be honest.Â
Tell me about the scenes where Fiona kind of Hellraisers out of the bed while you two are being intimate. Was it just a normal scene and then you had to pause for all the visual effects, or was it complicated from the beginning?
Abigail Hardingham: No, she actually rose through the bed. [Laughs.]
Cian Barry: Yeah, it was physically happening with a big hole in the mattress. And then all of a sudden you start feeling cold, wet hands on you. You get a real physical shock and things to react as well. And I think actually, because I saw that first scene⊠I saw that quite differently in the script.
You know, there were people screaming and running away and things like that. But something that seemed to happen while we were doing it was more we were just like freezing in shock, and from Robâs point of view, my point of view, having that split decision sort of thing. Like, part of you wants to run away but part of you as well, you donât want to let go of this person. And yeah, theyâre not looking quite the same as you remember them. Sheâs a little bit worse for wear after the accident, but you know, youâre still clinging onto the person and thatâs part of the whole thing. You donât want to run away because thereâs still this person you love and you donât want to let go of it. Because a lot of the time youâre quite torn in these things, and it changed the whole feeling of the scene.
And all credit to The Blaine Brothers as well, they saw that and went with it. âItâs different to what weâve written, letâs go with it. Letâs go and run and see how it feels.â And they stuck with it and they trusted us as well.
Abigail Hardingham: Itâs kind of like in American Hustle, sorry I keep referencing American Hustle, Jennifer Lawrenceâs character has a line where sheâs talking about her nail varnish, and she says thereâs something really sweet about it that you like, but it also is really kind of repellant. And I think that really kind of describes Nina, really. Especially Hollyâs infatuation with her. Itâs like Iâm trying to exorcise her from Robâs life but I also canât stop going back to her and staring at her, and she was very exciting and new and exactly what made [Holly] fall for Rob in the first place. So she had this really kind of sweet/sour element, which is why sheâs so captivating.

Epic Pictures Releasing
How do you get to the point, with your character, that having sex with a corpse seems like the only logical solution?
Cian Barry: [Laughs.] Isnât it obvious?
Abigail Hardingham: [Laughs.] Well, I know that thatâs how it physically looks, obviously. Thatâs how itâs represented in the film. But every time that we had a scene, the three of us, or even just myself and Fiona, I tried to imagine whatâs the conversation that theyâre having without her in the room? Why is she there? Because the first time that you see Nina I think that that initial conversation that Hollyâs finally managed to breach with Rob, when she says, âSo I know you tried to kill yourself, because your ex-girlfriend died? Is she an ex? Did you break up?â Like, I tried to imagine what that weird, awkward, fascinating was, and obviously Nina appearing through the bed was the physical metaphor of that.
So I guess when sheâs actually trying to be intimate with Nina, I kind of saw that as her really, really infatuated with the idea of what Nina made Rob. Like, the reason why Holly found Rob so fascinating and so sexually appealing and interesting and dark was because of Nina. Because actually, by the end of the film, when sheâs kind of realized that Rob has nearly rehabilitated and heâs moving on, [and] that she doesnât particularly like him like that anymore, and actually sheâs kind of got her own baggage to deal with and thatâs who Nina really starts to represent for Holly.
So yeah, it was interesting for me to get to that resolution, that thatâs why Hollyâs being sexually intimate with Nina. Thatâs what I kind of landed on.
Cian, there are some scenes in the movie that I donât think are talked about enough, and those are the scenes with you and Ninaâs parents. Thereâs a lot going on there.
Cian Barry: Yeah.
Can you tell me about those scenes, and whatâs going through your head in those moments?
Cian Barry: Well as Iâve stated, I love those. David [Troughton] and Elizabeth [Elvin] were fantastic as well. Thatâs the thing, itâs that fear of not letting go. Youâre finally thinking that youâll lose somebody forever, and you have these little things that you hang onto. Some just are needless, it might just be little mementos or whatever, but through convincing yourself that youâre actually doing it for somebody else and helping somebody else, and Rob convinces himself that heâs helping them and they need him.
Actually itâs, at best, mutual. By doing it, as well, heâs keeping wounds open, basically. Heâs keeping that pain going. Part of [you] feels like you need to keep it, keep that pain alive almost. Because otherwise youâre betraying somebody. You know, you feel like if you recover fully then youâve done⊠you feel guilty, you feel bad. You should be feeling bad, you should keep sad, you should keep hurt. Also as well, what are you if you donât have that? If you do move on? But they were just great to work with as well.
Abigail Hardingham: Yeah. Oh my god, they were so fantastic. I really wanted there to be this element of awkwardness, because obviously Iâve only met Elizabeth briefly when she was getting into hair and makeup. But I hadnât met David. So I was like, âHow can I make it really awkward and really aid the scene?â And then I got there and they were just both the most ridiculously present, lovely, kind, funny people. I was like, âGod, theyâre really making me work here.â [Laughing.] David in particular would try and make me laugh before a take. Iâm like, âYou do realize Iâm supposed to be having really complicated emotions right now?â Iâm just smiling at him.
Cian Barry: And then âaction,â and they just switch it on. Theyâre amazing. You feel likeâŠ
Abigail Hardingham: Yeah, but youâre like that Cian. Youâre like that. You are so basically so affable. Youâre like a little puppy, youâre so funny and so cute, and Iâm like, âIâm trying to get into the moment!â [Laughs.] And then as soon as they said âactionâ youâre like, so serious and complicated. Itâs brilliant.
Cian Barry: Oh, shut up. Donât⊠oh no, say more. Say more. Compliment me.
Top Photo:Â Epic Pictures Releasing
William Bibbiani (everyone calls him âBibbsâ) is Craveâs film content editor and critic. You can hear him every week on The B-Movies Podcast and watch him on the weekly YouTube series Most Craved and What the Flick. Follow his rantings on Twitter at @WilliamBibbiani.