‘I Want Your Sex’ Trailer: Olivia Wilde and Cooper Hoffman Push Every Boundary in Gregg Araki’s Erotic Thriller
Photo courtesy of Magnolia Pictures.
Gregg Araki returns to feature filmmaking with a provocative, sex-positive Sundance breakout that turns desire, power and obsession into a chaotic new kind of romantic nightmare.
Gregg Araki is back, and he is not exactly returning quietly.
Magnolia Pictures and Magnet Releasing have released the first trailer for ‘I Want Your Sex,’ Araki’s boundary-pushing erotic comedy thriller starring Olivia Wilde and Cooper Hoffman. The film follows Elliot, played by Hoffman, a young assistant who becomes entangled with Erika Tracy, a provocative artist played by Wilde, after she hires him to become her sexual muse. What begins as a fantasy of proximity, desire and power quickly turns into something more unstable, as the trailer teases a relationship built around domination, obsession, betrayal and increasingly dangerous games.
The footage leans directly into the film’s reputation as one of the buzziest and most sexually explicit titles to come out of Sundance. Ball gags, whips, strap-ons, threesome chaos and sadomasochistic power play all appear to be part of Araki’s latest provocation, but the trailer also suggests that ‘I Want Your Sex’ is not merely interested in shock value. Wilde’s Erika appears to be both seductive and controlling, while Hoffman’s Elliot enters her world with the wide-eyed curiosity of someone who believes he has found liberation before realizing he may have stepped into something far more complicated.
That tension fits naturally within Araki’s larger body of work. The filmmaker became one of the defining voices of queer independent cinema through films like ‘Totally F***ed Up,’ ‘The Doom Generation’ and ‘Nowhere,’ works that helped shape his reputation for turning youth culture, sexuality, alienation and pop chaos into something both anarchic and deeply personal. ‘I Want Your Sex’ marks Araki’s long-awaited return to feature filmmaking after 2014’s ‘White Bird in a Blizzard,’ following years of television work on shows including ‘Riverdale,’ ‘13 Reasons Why,’ ‘Monster’ and ‘American Gigolo.’
Charli xcx and Cooper Hoffman in I WANT YOUR SEX. - Photo courtesy of Magnolia Pictures.
The film also arrives at a moment when sex on screen remains a strangely contested subject. Despite years of prestige television pushing boundaries, mainstream American film has often become more cautious about eroticism, especially when compared with the kind of unruly independent cinema that helped define Araki’s rise. ‘I Want Your Sex’ seems designed to confront that tension head-on. At Sundance, Wilde described the film as an irreverent and playful look at the sexual revolution of a young person, while also framing sex as a metaphor for broader emotional experience.
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The cast adds to the film’s cult-ready appeal. Alongside Wilde and Hoffman, ‘I Want Your Sex’ features Charli XCX, Mason Gooding, Chase Sui Wonders, Daveed Diggs, Johnny Knoxville, Margaret Cho and Roxane Mesquida. That ensemble suggests Araki is once again building a heightened, combustible world where pop culture, performance, danger and desire all collide. The film was co-written by Araki and Karley Sciortino, whose own work has often explored sexuality, intimacy and taboo with a mix of humor and candor.
Photo Credit: Jonathan P Moustakas, The Cinema Group, LLC
‘I Want Your Sex’ premiered at the 2026 Sundance Film Festival, where it became one of the festival’s more talked-about titles and was later acquired for U.S. distribution by Magnolia Pictures in a seven-figure deal. The trailer now positions the film as one of the summer’s more provocative indie releases, not because it promises to be tasteful, restrained or easy to categorize, but because it appears to be fully committed to the kind of messy adult filmmaking that has become increasingly rare.
Whether the film ultimately plays as erotic thriller, screwball sex comedy, dom-sub romance or Araki-style pop provocation, the trailer makes one thing clear: ‘I Want Your Sex’ is not trying to blend in. It looks loud, kinky, chaotic, funny, dangerous and deliberately uncomfortable, which may be exactly the point. In a film landscape often dominated by franchise safety and algorithmic caution, Araki’s return looks like a reminder that cinema can still be horny, strange and willing to misbehave.
‘I Want Your Sex’ is scheduled to open in U.S. theaters on July 31.



