Sexuele Voorlichting -1991 Belgium-.mp4l Here
But that night, Jonas sat in the dark of his apartment. He opened his private folder. He took the sterile, official voiceover about "mutual respect" and "enthusiastic consent" and laid it over the B-roll of Couple #3 on the park bench. Her pinky hooking his. His crimson ears. The silence that wasn't empty, but full.
He realized the voorlichting had taught him something it never intended. You can script the rules of a healthy relationship. You can diagram the mechanics. But the actual story—the romance, the mess, the accidental truth—happens in the cuts, the outtakes, the moments the director misses.
Couple #3 was the problem. She was a tall, sharp-boned woman with dark curly hair, credited only as "Actor 3F." He was a lanky, gentle-eyed man with a nervous laugh, "Actor 3M." Sexuele Voorlichting -1991 Belgium-.mp4l
It was an hour of footage shot by a second unit, meant to be cutaway shots of the couples looking at each other. The director had clearly given them simple prompts: Look like you’re having a first date. Look like you’ve had an argument. Look like you’re about to kiss.
Jonas rewound. Played it again. He felt a strange, unprofessional warmth in his chest. This was wrong. He was an editor. He was supposed to see the seams, the acting choices, the lighting flaws. He was not supposed to root for two people reading cue cards. But that night, Jonas sat in the dark of his apartment
The director, a tired woman with a headset, sighed. "Reset. Too much intimacy. This is an educational video, not a rom-com."
The Script Between the Lines
The script was a checklist. "How to say no." "How to ask for consent." "How to use a condom on a wooden model." Jonas worked methodically, slicing the lectures, inserting the mandatory animations of sperm and eggs. He was bored to tears.